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War on Iraq

Shot More Than 40,000 Times, an Iraqi Artist Spreads a Message with a Paintball Gun

By Kari Lydersen, In These Times. Posted June 22, 2007.


When artist Wafaa Bilal set up a paintball gun that people could aim and fire at him over the Internet for 42 days, he never guessed that by day 20, he'd get shot more than 40,000 times and that hackers would program the gun to fire automatically.
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When Iraqi artist Wafaa Bilal decided to sequester himself in a Chicago art gallery for 42 days with a paintball gun that people could aim and fire at him over the Internet, he thought he might get a few shots per day. He never guessed that by day 20, more than 40,000 shots would be fired and that hackers would program the gun to fire automatically.

His exhibit, "Domestic Tension," shows the constant stress and fear under which his family and others in Iraq live. And it highlights the detached, remote way both the American public and soldiers experience modern warfare.

"To the Western media it's a virtual war going on in Iraq -- we're far removed in the comfort zone," he says. "We're allowed to disengage from the consequences of war. We don't see mutilated bodies, we don't see the toll on human beings."

It is unclear how well he has conveyed his first point.

It is chilling how well he has conveyed the second.

To judge from the blog and chatroom posts on various websites that have linked to his website, the majority of people who took shots at Bilal as they watched him over a live Webcam seemed either oblivious or hostile to his antiwar message. The bulk of the more than 62,000 people from at least 128 countries who took aim were apparently video-game and paintball junkies, intrigued by the possibility of shooting someone hundreds of miles away with a click of their mouse.

"They'd say, 'This has nothing to do with politics. I just wanted to see if I could fire from Minnesota and hit someone in Chicago,'•" he says. "It was much different on opening night [which was a] very playful atmosphere. I wanted to draw people in by doing something playful. But then when all the people left, the shooting continued."

After two and a half weeks of confinement in a simulated bedroom/office in FlatFile Galleries, Bilal was suffering ear and chest pain, sleep deprivation and overall stress from the constant ear-shattering blast of the gas-powered paintball gun, which he has maxed out his credit cards to supply with new balls.

The 40-year-old professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago is no stranger to physical hardship and political tension. In Iraq, he was arrested as a dissident under Saddam Hussein's regime. Because a member of his family had been accused of disloyalty to the regime, he was not allowed to study art at the university. When Hussein demanded "volunteers" to attack Kuwait, Bilal infuriated officials by refusing. He began organizing with opposition groups and spending time with dissident artists who painted anti-authoritarian calligraphy on walls at night.

"There was so much fear, you couldn't even talk to your brother or sister -- the saying was that the walls had ears," he says. "You could make a simple joke and end up disappeared and tortured. There were a lot of people fighting the regime, but it was so brutal it didn't make any difference. A whole village could be disappeared."

Bilal fled Iraq in 1991 and spent two years in a Saudi refugee camp. There, he scrapped together supplies to paint and teach children art in a studio he built out of adobe with a plastic-sheeting window.

"We realized we weren't going to leave any time soon," he says. "We were given tents to live in, and the desert has no mercy when storms come."

In late 1992, Bilal came to the United States and studied art at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, where he lived until moving to Chicago. In 2005, his 21-year-old brother, whom Bilal describes as "apolitical," was killed by shrapnel as he stepped outside the family's home in Najaf. Soon after, Bilal's father died. It was then the idea for "Domestic Tension," which he originally considered calling "Shoot an Iraqi," began to brew. (He later decided that name would be too incendiary.) A news story about a U.S. soldier sitting in Colorado firing missiles in Iraq cemented his desire to showcase the technological, remote aspect of modern war. He said his family thinks he's "crazy."

"I tell them, 'Desperate times require desperate measures,' and this is a desperate time for Iraqis, and Americans too."


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Kari Lydersen, a regular contributor to AlterNet, also writes for the Washington Post and is an instructor for the Urban Youth International Journalism Program in Chicago. She hasjust published a book, Out of the Sea and Into the Fire: Latin American-US Immigration in the Global Age.

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Bilal brings out the bully in folks...
Posted by: Blade on Jun 22, 2007 1:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What I like about Bilal's work is how the interaction reveals as much or more about the artist's clients than it does about the artist.
There are so many fascinating aspects in life concerning the relationship between the bully and the victim, or the dominant and the submissive, or, in this case, the sadists and the masochist.

Bilal flushed the sadists out of their dens, and provided only one victim for the bait.

Bullies are cowards, usually, and love to gang up on their prey.

Look around, you see it everywhere.

One reason I don't trust groups, the lynch mob mentality is always lurking, ready, like a beast panting for its meat.

Now he needs to figure out a way to do a role reversal, and be able to shoot the bullies.

Bullies hate one thing more than any other, that is, for you to reverse their role, take away their power, and use it against them.

That's why they'll cheat, lie, character assassinate, demonize, ostrasize, and murder to prevent the revelation of truth.

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» I'm one of those people Posted by: ateo
Misrepresent much?
Posted by: Allison on Jun 22, 2007 6:15 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The number of shots skyrocketed after his story was reported on the sarcastic, vaguely political website Digg.com. The majority of comments posted were hostile and aggressive...

People who posted comments with a political message or just pleading for more sympathy for Bilal were attacked and called "jihadist sympathizers."


I'm not a mindless Digg-fanboy but you make the site sound like Little Green Footballs. Which it hardly is. I checked out the Digg thread in question and there was none of the mass hatred described, or if there was it was moderated down below 0 by the readership (I didn't read all the sub-zero trash). So I think you're exaggerating to make this guy sound more persecuted than he is.

Most net-nerds OPPOSE the war, but tend to be fascinated by interesting displays of technology. There were posts showing how you could hack the gun to constantly veer to the left, and people wondering if they could do anything else to prevent it shooting him. Nobody was eagerly waiting to "shoot the Iraqi".

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I'm officially disgusted
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Jun 22, 2007 7:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What the hell is *WRONG* with people?

Congratulations, folks, we've finally succumbed to 'virtual terrorism' in a country where they're getting enough abuse from US military who have been dumped & trapped there.





Spread Love...
... but wear the Glove!


BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
"We, two, form a multitude" ~ Ovid
==
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"

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» Welcome to reality Posted by: ateo
just a minor detail
Posted by: pre-emptive impeachment on Jun 22, 2007 10:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...constant ear-shattering blast of the gas-powered paintball gun

I used to paintball and this sounds like an incredible exaggeration. Every paintball gun I played with or heard made a pretty quiet poof noise. Although, it is quite possible he set it up to sound like a real gun.

Overall I think the idea is interesting. There's no doubt that there will be those pyscho people who abuse it. I personally have no desire to shoot the guy, but I am honestly curious about the technology.

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» RE: depends on the paint gun Posted by: Techubus
» RE: just a minor detail Posted by: averysays
» RE: just a minor detail Posted by: lessbread
» RE: just a minor detail Posted by: lordzombie
Strange Piece
Posted by: Techubus on Jun 22, 2007 12:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not really sure what I think about this. As a technology enthusiast and paint baller this story intrigues me. I think I'd go crazy if I subjected myself to this. I hope the guy wore some kind of body protection besides a face mask. Getting shot is painful. Getting shot that many times would be excruciating without protection.

I'm not surprised to hear about the jerks though. The anonymity of the internet has the amazing ability to turn a normal person into a giant asshole. This phenomenon has become a commonly linked joked as seen in this comic strip

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Maybe the Pentagon should try this out. I'm sure it would be popular
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Jun 22, 2007 2:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
with the sickos in the US and indeed around the world. Imagine you control, via the internet, a .50 cal gun or, better yet, one of those multi-million dollar 'smart' bombs. You can have great fun killing insurgents or just anyone who happens across the line of fire. Or shoot up their goats or houses just for the heck of it. Great wholesome fun for the whole family!They could even charge some money for it, maybe via PayPal, and help fund the 'surge'. Discounts for high-school age children if you fill out the form for a military recruiter to contact you even!

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He should have spent a a few hours playing an online game before...
Posted by: ateo on Jun 24, 2007 4:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
he did this. In those few hours he could have found out just how moronic, immature, hostile, and aggressive all of the 16-23 year old American males on the 'net are. It's one part testosterone, one part stupidity, and one part NERD RAGE rolled up in these kids.

Being from Iraq and 40 years old I doubt he realized just who most of the people on the internet are and what they are like.

I'd say about 70% of American internet users at any given time are young males looking for porn and/or entertainment. Most of them could find Iraq on a map but if you ask them they'll tell you the U.S. should, "nuke all the sand niggers."

Let those morons shoot me with a paintball gun? Yea, I don't think so.

If nothing else all that was demonstrated here is that kids growing up in America today are totally desensitized to violence, have no compassion for other human beings, and more than willing to be that 19 year old sitting in Colorado pressing buttons that launch missiles to kill people.

Where's the alternet poster "MiddleClassWhiteMale" to explain to us all why Iraqi's are subhuman scum that deserve to be killed? Yea, that's America for you.

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