MIT's Media Lab has announced that it will award $250,000 to a group or individual for an act of civil disobedience that stands out above the rest. http://edition.cnn.com/2017/03/08/us/mit-civil-disobedience/index.html
Sounds dangerous... but, then, it is the will to disobey that has made us great on so many occasions.
"You don't change the world by doing what you're told," says Joi Ito, the director of MIT's Media Lab.
According to the department's website, "this idea came after a realization that there's a widespread frustration from people trying to figure out how can we effectively harness responsible, ethical disobedience aimed at challenging our norms, rules or laws to benefit society."
"You don't get a Nobel Prize for doing what you're told, you get it for questioning authority," says Ito. Truely, people like Martin Luther King, Jr., Galileo and even the American revolutionaries had to step outside of what was legal in order to affect the greater good.
All told, the award is going to be given based on one caveat: "The recipient must have taken a personal risk in order to affect positive change for greater society."
Sounds like it was tailor made for brave Pizzagate exposers to me.
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doubletake ago
Yeah, Right! BE SURE to sign your name and give them your phone no, your picture, you can be a star! Like flies to shit, you gotta be fuquing kidding me. you can get arrested for inciting to riot (=protest, these days, even conspiracy if a friend drives you to the event with your sign). Hell, MIT should get busted for the same thing!
Yo, MITfux, give it to WIKILEAKS, it would be tough to find a more deserving group.