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Published: 2002-07-29 15:36:01 +0000 UTC; Views: 35281; Favourites: 1127; Downloads: 390
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Description
Please full-size to see the words in the left thumbprint.This is a layout I am doing for an article on airport profiling. Basically the idea is that profiling may not be an efficient method of stopping crime as the point is to try and detect criminal intentions from physical attributes of a person. The text in the fingerprint dicusses that.
The thumbprint is mine. So are the words. I composed this with a black Crayola marker, my thumb, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, and Quark Xpress.
The text, so you don't strain your eyes:
Who we are is not determined by the physical. We do not identify ourselves by our physical bodies, but by our minds, some meta-physical essence inside. Ever since René Descartes 17th Century philosophy, humankind has separated the mind from the body. The Christians called it a soul. The Hindu called it an essence. It is our mind, our soul, our essence that truly defines us. It is then logical that we should be judged from inside out, by inner beauty or lack thereof instead of the color of our skin. The catch: minds and bodies are not split. It is a primal dissociation, but a physical impossibility. The question America now faces is not whether profiling is ethical, but if it is even effective. Profiling assumes that certain physical characteristics can directly correlate with internal motives. Is it really realistic to assume that physical traits can expose signs of a criminal mind within? And if America does begin to assume such a thing, doesn’t associating the physical with the internal qualify as a justified type of racism? If profiling can be justified as a necessary security measure in airports, can it also be justified in the work place? Can an employer justify scrutinizing employees of a certain skin color more than other employees by saying that the security of their business is at stake? If profiling is acceptable in the airport, where else do the same ethics apply? Associating the internal with the external itself can fall into bias. A mindset which sees profiling not only as acceptable, but necessary, may also be susceptible to falling back into racism, sexism, classism, and countless other ism’s America spent the past century trying to claw it’s way out of. In the new millennium, is America willing to leap back into the biases it spent over a hundred years trying to escape from? The way the country handles security in its airports may serve as a prescendent for how it handles security for the next few centuries to come. Perhaps, after the wound that the World Trade Center attacks inflicted on America’s sense of safety, it is comforting to believe that we will be able to see another attack before it hits. Perhaps there is some comfort in thinking that a criminal is visible by outward signs. We think of criminals in terms of physical manifestations in television shows and movies. We think of shifty eyes and evil grimaces. We think in terms of sunglasses, trenchcoats, and dark clothes. Perhaps America needs to believe that criminality is a visible characteristic that can be recognized before the crime in inflicted. Perhaps America needs to believe that profiling is effective.
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Comments: 148
GrimSilence [2008-03-20 03:56:23 +0000 UTC]
this really cool, very thought provoking.
don't listen to those idiots who are trying to put you down because they don't like what you're saying, you have a right to your opinion so feel free to share it with the world.
whether or not i believe what you're saying, i think the your style and word choice is beautiful.
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BellicoseBreakfast [2008-03-20 03:54:58 +0000 UTC]
I think a number of philosophers would take issue with a few points, and I think other points have been overgeneralized for the critique, but I can understand the constraints something like this might place on you, space-wise.
Awesome work
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ProdigalKnight [2008-03-20 03:47:19 +0000 UTC]
That's an interesting method to get your point across. Very creative.
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Leugi [2008-03-20 03:44:46 +0000 UTC]
Great!, but even before Descartes humanity divided human body and soul, for example Plato used to do that.
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touchedbyadeviant [2008-03-20 03:38:53 +0000 UTC]
That was awesome...
but now the FBI has your print... dun dun dun
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jedimario [2008-03-20 03:25:29 +0000 UTC]
Profiling is how anyone catches and identifies any criminal. Racial profiling is the "problem".
Good visually, but the words are total crap.
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StickerDan [2008-03-20 03:05:05 +0000 UTC]
profiling is absolutely acceptable, people do it to creatures constantly, so why not to other humans... racism? no.
a pitbull bites you once, a pit bull bites you twice... you will NEVER in your born days again, look at another pitbull or come into any distance within one...
you walk down the streets, and get beat up or raped by some thugs of any color... you walk down another street another time, and get beat up or raped by some thugs again... you will never in your born days come into contact with thugs again...
i mean i do present a valid point. so as far as profiling goes... lets face it, most hi-jackers are of the "middle eastern" decent...
so i guess the only words your thoughts provoke, are... go hug a tree, and cry a river to water it...
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Kajuah In reply to StickerDan [2008-04-02 02:42:18 +0000 UTC]
Only people i profile is idiots...sadly..i really shouldn't profile at all buut ...i guess we all have our issues?
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Ja-Kitsu-Ryou [2008-03-20 01:33:33 +0000 UTC]
Excellent and incredibly true, it is unfortunate that humans always seem to need a scapegoat when something tragic happens. Well done on the design and wording!
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omgCAM [2008-03-20 01:18:22 +0000 UTC]
Excellent and thought provoking - you manage poetry and sound logic, both of which are often seen as anathema to the other.
I don't think you truly grasp racial profiling, though. "Profiling assumes that certain physical characteristics can directly correlate with internal motives." This is not true: the concept behind racial profiling is not skin color, but rather nationality. It is a sad but true fact that someone who was born and raised in a country held in the grip of Islamic terrorism has a much higher chance of carrying out a violent act than a man who grows up in the suburbs of a large city - and it just so happens that the vast majority of said criminals are Middle Eastern. The reason that many people generally suspect a black man from the projects of being a criminal is not because he is black (at least, I hope not) but because he was raised in an area where violence, drugs, and firearms are the order of the day.
Racial profiling does, however, present problems in this regard; not every Islamic terrorist is of Middle Eastern descent (I swear to God that we took down some Irish guys to Abu Grab - pale skin, red hair, and freckles) and I guarantee you that not all criminals raised in a ghetto are black. In fact, a close friend of mine used to sell drugs and got in a view violent fire fights - and his skin was as white as virgin snow.
Profiling someone based on nationality is much more sound than profiling someone based on their race. So I still agree with you that racial profiling, as it stands now, is a stupid idea - just for different reasons.
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rE-Fuuused [2008-03-20 01:11:33 +0000 UTC]
This is class! I didnt realise there were even words there until i looked closer! Love the ideas! So you just used a marker to get that thumb print? Its so clear!
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AstuteEnigma [2008-03-20 00:59:52 +0000 UTC]
Wow this truly is great! I love the thought and the design. The time spent on this was well worth it.
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djinn506 [2008-03-20 00:38:37 +0000 UTC]
Damn you!!. That's so bloody truthful and shokin I'll have to fav it like a hundreed times. What would the other guys do?, make a clowdy sky with nails?. Im mostly faving the depht of the text, and the critisism to the States, but that can be aplyed to all sorts of social discrimination and useless segurity rules.
A+++++++
Keep it goin!
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JesterSeven [2008-03-20 00:08:35 +0000 UTC]
Wow, profiling by appearance? That sounds like a throwback to the days of physiognomy, and if I recall that didn't work all that well.
An impressive work.
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brain-fork [2008-03-20 00:06:50 +0000 UTC]
That is an awesome concept and an amazing execution!
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Alimari [2008-03-19 22:30:00 +0000 UTC]
All the requirements of an effective graphic: simple, eye-catching, concise, thought-provoking, and effective.
That aside, your argument is well constructed and logical. Bonus points for that.
Honestly its a bit of a shame to waste it on a mere article. I'd love to see this on billboards in airports.
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Otacon144 [2008-03-19 21:23:17 +0000 UTC]
Food for thought, definitely.
And what a presentation!
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leahzero [2008-03-19 21:18:19 +0000 UTC]
Great composition, and it's certainly thought-provoking...but I'd venture to say that some of the suppositions in your text are nearly as simplistic and unfounded as the kind of rationale used to justify racial profiling.
The human "mind" is an intrinsic and integrated part of the body; no more, no less. It has a firm physical basis: neurons, neurochemicals, etc. So in a sense, judging someone by their intellect, personality, willful behavior etc. is judging them on a physical basis. Just because it's only apparent to us in an indirect and abstract form doesn't make it any less physical. Consider the way we looked at the universe before the discovery of quantum mechanics: we believed we already knew the smallest elements which composed existence, that objects were separate from one another and that certain forces and laws were absolutely true in all circumstances. Instead it turns out that reality is constructed of a dense haze of uncertainty which behaves relatively according to its observers.
This isn't to say that human choice is an illusion and deterministic because it has a physical origin, or to condone the tyranny of profiling, but simply to point out that this issue is not as simple as it seems and that there are no easy answers. We don't need to kowtow to the crude dualities which bigots espouse--there's room for ambiguity and relativity in notions of identity and self.
I applaud you for making so many people stop and think. What more could an artist ask for?
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Krazykat5216 [2008-03-19 20:59:58 +0000 UTC]
What a cool idea, and you executed it very well!
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thecosmicfool [2008-03-19 20:55:46 +0000 UTC]
Cool design.
Do they actually do that in America? Scary...
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ceruleanraspberries [2008-03-19 20:17:34 +0000 UTC]
This is very intricate, and I just caught a little teensy thing you might want to change: when it says "A mindset which sees profiling not only as acceptable, but necessary" in the fingerprint, it says "ass" instead of "as". Don't worry I do that all the time, it's always hard to catch when proofreading, but you should probably change it. Other than that this is a very strong perspective and a bold statement. You hould keep up the work, it's intriguing work, really.
Note: where I'm talking about is 8 lines up from the bottom of the fingerprint on the right side.
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corrdawg [2008-03-19 20:01:15 +0000 UTC]
O god, I read the whole fingerprint then scrolled down to see it all right there
Nicely done, it was quite moving.
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wonderworldofnight [2008-03-19 19:48:11 +0000 UTC]
at first i didn't know there were words, and then i clicked on the image and was like, whoa, this is SO cool! nice design
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hyper-otaku-of-doom [2008-03-19 19:19:32 +0000 UTC]
Good for you for pointing out such a touchy topic. You've delivered it in such a thought-provoking way. Thumbs up and kudos to you. Most definately
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Carlotta4th [2008-03-19 16:48:20 +0000 UTC]
You can't commit any crimes, now, because we've all got your thumbprint (joking, of course. Not that you would commit crimes, anyway...)
Profiling is interesting. I'm not saying that everyone with a mohawk and 50 piercings in each ear does drugs, but I do think that such a person would be more likely to do drugs than a 3-year old with pigtails. I'm not sure where I stand on the issue. I obviously don't think that people should be judged by the way they look, but I have to admit that they probably are.
I'm probably "judged" by the way I look, too (although I could care less). Is it effective, though? I think personal appearance decisions can be judged more effectively than genetic ones. So genetic profiling would be stupid, because I don't think anyone can say "his eyes are slightly slanted" and check the "murderer" box on their chart.
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Driller [2008-03-19 16:28:05 +0000 UTC]
even though it's quite old, amazing work. Inspiring, and not at least a quite touchy subject even up-to-date Thanks!
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DaveCox [2008-03-19 16:18:29 +0000 UTC]
when i saw the thumbnail of the finger print i said to myself, "please it be made us from words!" and when viewing it in it's entirety you didnt fail to satisfy! nice work on the layout and the concept behind the message! as for the message itself i feel that you have truely hit the nail on the head when it comes to americas parnoia!
great work man - and congrats on the DD
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vibeXeuphoria [2008-03-19 16:15:52 +0000 UTC]
some nice idealism, at least.
and nicely executed.
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MyLaundryStinks [2008-03-19 16:05:19 +0000 UTC]
Frankly, I'm just impressed.
I'm going to be honest and tell you that I didn't read everything. It's more the 'I can't believe you did that, that looks so cool!' factor. I really like this. It's a perfect example of creative typography.
Great job!
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