The converting power of bumpers
Nov. 14th, 2005 09:28 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Has anyone ever changed their opinion about an issue because of a bumper sticker?
I saw one of those cars with a thick layer of bumper stickers across the back. This one was an environmentalist vegan car (Go vegan!, Save the whales!, Save the animals! Stop "sport" hunting! *, etc.). Setting aside the actual content, upon seeing it, I wondered if anyone has ever read a slogan on a bumper and gone: "Oh my God! I never thought of it that way!"
Perhaps a sport hunter in a beat-up, mud-coated pick-up truck is heading back from the woods with a cooler of freshly butchered wild game (let's pull out a whole bunch of stereotypes... or we'll just refer to my sister-in-law's boyfriend, who fits this description perfectly). While stopped in traffic, he ends up reading Stop "sport" hunting! on the back of the hybrid car in front of him. And maybe it's the power of the sarcastic quotation marks, or maybe it's the eye-catching colours, but suddenly he regrets the death of the animals he hunted and he renounces his hobby and all the parts of his lifestyle associated with it. He goes vegan and stops wearing leather.
Perhaps a young environmentalist on a bike, heading home from their socially- and environmentally-conscious work, sees a Save the whales! Collect the whole set! sticker on the back of the SUV that cuts them off. And maybe it's the witty sarcastic slogan, but suddenly he realises that he has been wasting his whole life and hasn't been making nearly as much money as he could have been. He becomes an advertising executive and buys a Hummer.
Ah, the hypothetical power of bumper stickers!
Really this is all idle wondering. I think people put bumper stickers out there to advertise who they are, not to convert anyone else.
*On a side note, I think that's the only correct use of sarcastic quotes I've ever seen in public. How many grammar geek points do I gain because that's why I noticed the stickers? Or do I lose vegetarian points for not noticing the stickers for their pro-animal stance?
I saw one of those cars with a thick layer of bumper stickers across the back. This one was an environmentalist vegan car (Go vegan!, Save the whales!, Save the animals! Stop "sport" hunting! *, etc.). Setting aside the actual content, upon seeing it, I wondered if anyone has ever read a slogan on a bumper and gone: "Oh my God! I never thought of it that way!"
Perhaps a sport hunter in a beat-up, mud-coated pick-up truck is heading back from the woods with a cooler of freshly butchered wild game (let's pull out a whole bunch of stereotypes... or we'll just refer to my sister-in-law's boyfriend, who fits this description perfectly). While stopped in traffic, he ends up reading Stop "sport" hunting! on the back of the hybrid car in front of him. And maybe it's the power of the sarcastic quotation marks, or maybe it's the eye-catching colours, but suddenly he regrets the death of the animals he hunted and he renounces his hobby and all the parts of his lifestyle associated with it. He goes vegan and stops wearing leather.
Perhaps a young environmentalist on a bike, heading home from their socially- and environmentally-conscious work, sees a Save the whales! Collect the whole set! sticker on the back of the SUV that cuts them off. And maybe it's the witty sarcastic slogan, but suddenly he realises that he has been wasting his whole life and hasn't been making nearly as much money as he could have been. He becomes an advertising executive and buys a Hummer.
Ah, the hypothetical power of bumper stickers!
Really this is all idle wondering. I think people put bumper stickers out there to advertise who they are, not to convert anyone else.
*On a side note, I think that's the only correct use of sarcastic quotes I've ever seen in public. How many grammar geek points do I gain because that's why I noticed the stickers? Or do I lose vegetarian points for not noticing the stickers for their pro-animal stance?
no subject
Date: 2005-11-16 06:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-11-16 05:29 pm (UTC)Now my mind is rambling at me about "outing" in the GLBT community and about pride as part of the identity of minority groups. This stuff is so interesting! If I ever go back to school, I simply must fit in some sociology classes next time.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-17 06:31 am (UTC)I think about the "Sorry I couldn't come to church, I was busy practicing witchcraft and becoming a lesbian." bumpersticker.. I think that part of it is ridiculing stereotypes, too. Or maybe that idea isn't ridiculous to some people?! Who knows what lurks in the mind of Jerry Falwell and his ilk..
Maybe people are asserting their own individuality for it's own sake, or maybe they're doing it in order to give other people the courage to do something a little less normal (ie, bring their own bag to the grocery store?) by making the abnormal a little less strange. I think that this works with pride, and "outing" too.
(Wohoo! A concrete reason to let my freakishnesses show even more!)
no subject
Date: 2005-11-17 07:26 pm (UTC)We should take every excuse we can!
By the way, I like your new icon - I can't stop watching it!
no subject
Date: 2005-11-17 09:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-11-24 03:44 am (UTC)Random comment-thread hijack:
Human geography is the shiz-nat. :>
no subject
Date: 2005-11-24 04:02 am (UTC)Human geography, huh? Didn't get a chance to take any of those courses either.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-26 08:54 pm (UTC)Are you doing a class in HG now?