Ghost Server Dance Shirt


Robert F. X. Giroux

Artist

Member Creative Alliance; Baltimore, Maryland

The Big Show was the first exhibition launched by the Creative Alliance when it was founded eighteen years ago, and this year the theme is based on Movement. The Big Show remains one of our favorite traditions and is a great opportunity to pick up some affordable art! Any Creative Alliance member can enter a piece. Now is the perfect time to join or renew your membership.

On view: Jun 29-Jul 31.

Big Show BIG PARTY w/ BOSLEY, Fri Jul 12, 7-10pm.


 

Robert F.X. Giroux Artwork Submission

Title: Ghost Server Dance Shirt

Description: 36” X 36” X 11/2” mixed media on black canvas.

 Words on Canvas

Ghost Server Dance Shirts are shirts or other garment items created by the US National Security Chiefs and believed to be imbued with ‘all knowing’ powers and Big Brother medicine.

Ghost Server Dance Shirts revered by certain factions of the US Government were supposed to foresee and guard against all foreign or domestic evil doers. However, the shirts did not work as promised, and consequently many Americans have gone to war since the birth of the Government’s Ghost Dance culture by executive order in 1947. Criticism of Ghost Dance culture continues to be a failure to ‘connect the dots’.

The inability to ‘connect the dots’ led the Ghost Dance culture in 2013 to declare that “Ghost Dance culture will ‘get it right’ while assuring not to spy on the American public”. Getting it right, once again, was the creation of a 500,000,000,000,000,000,000 page encrypted database entitled: Volume I: The Yotabyte; Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Everybody’s Business all at Once.”  Volume I is a digital throng of private numbers, IP Addresses, driver’s license, Facebook timelines, tagged photos, phone recordings, Goggles, twits, emails, EZ Pass, GPS, CCTV, bar code purchases, tax fragments (IRS could not find all receipts), credit data, surveillance video, Skype sex, the whole kit & caboodle, and kitchen sinks (virtual porcelain) stolen from the American People.

Anthropologists argue that the most likely source of the belief that Ghost Server Dance Shirts could predict evil doer behavior is the Mormon Temple garment (which Mormons believe protect the wearer from evil, though not ‘evil backpack toting’ Beantown terrorists) or the Lakota Sioux Ghost Dance Shirt thought by Kicking Bear in the 1890’s to be capable of repelling bullets during battle. Although the true sources of belief in the shirts power can’t be known what is known is the trillions of dollars spent by the Ghost Dance culture to sustain a duplicitous program fostering the belief that healthy and robust national security can only be accomplished through Big Brother medicine spending.

Ghost Server Dance Shirts are still considered to be secret and many US Government Executive, Legislative, and Judicial Chiefs as well as defense, multi-national and telecommunication companies prefer that they and costs of them not be displayed for national security reasons.

In Kurt Vonnegut’s novel Player Piano, a group opposed to the inflexible structure of a tyrannical automated US Government calls itself the Ghost Shirt Society. The group claims that like the Lakota Sioux, they are "making one last fight for the old values.”  Opposition to the Ghost Dance culture in 2013 was also founded on ‘old values’ which included the use of courts, privacy laws, constitutional amendments, and common sense as a prerequisite to national security policies allowing electronic hyper manic ‘up in your business’ through the keyhole peeping for good ole Uncle Sam.

Wikipedia text used as allowed by Creative Commons Attribution-Share A like 3.0 un ported License and GNU Free Documentation License. Acknowledgement: Alice Kehoe 1989. "Massacre at Wounded Knee Creek", The Ghost Dance: Ethnohistory and Revitalization, Washington, DC: Thompson Publishing; Kurt Vonnegut. Player Piano. 1952. New York: Dial Press, 2006; James Mooney Anthropologist.

 

Image of Ghost Server Dance Shirt by Robert F.X. Giroux Baltimore, MD 2013



Robert F.X. Giroux

rfxgiroux@gmail.com

www.DennisGiroux.com

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