It all ends in parody.

arthur 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Christoph Reuss
Sent: Wednesday, January 24, 2007 8:10 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Futurework] Rent-A-Demonstrator

[George Soros can rent the most...]


http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,460449,00.html

GUNS FOR HIRE

Need a Demonstrator? Now You Can Rent Them Online

   By David Gordon Smith
   January 18, 2007, 04:21 PM

A German Web site has come up a novel niche market -- renting out
demonstrators for public protests. Good-looking protestors can help
an organization get its political message to the public for as little
as ¤145 a day.


Loud public protests accompanied the recent revelation that doctors
had hired protesters for a December demonstration in front of
Berlin's Reichstag.

For Germans old enough to remember the glory days of 1968, when
communes were all the rage and students took to the streets to
protest against all kinds of injustices, the country in 2007 is
almost a completely foreign place. The welfare state is being rolled
back, German troops are now engaged in military operations abroad,
and the current generation of young people seems more interested in
attending business school than bringing down the military-industrial
complex.

Just how much the world has changed since those days can be seen at
the Web site Erento.com. What the '68 generation once did out of
passion, people now do for money. Berlin-based Erento, a company that
pairs renters with potential customers, offers an unusual lineup of
products and services for loan. In addition to such rentals as snow
machines, horse-drawn carriages for weddings, chicken-plucking
machines and private jets, the site also now offers a unique service:
protestors for hire.

Judging by their profiles, most of the 300-plus people currently
listed in the "rent a demonstrator" category are young and
attractive. Potential agitators looking for support for their public
protests can choose, for example, Steffen, age 22, 190 cm tall (6
feet 2 inches), "athletic" and with a shoe size of 45. He's available
for gigs all over Germany, but says he prefers the state of North
Rhine-Westphalia. Or Manuela, who has green eyes and "very long" hair
and is available within a 100-kilometer range of Berlin. Included in
the extensive personal information -- which at times seems more
suited to a dating site -- are skin color and "appearance type,"
which can be for example "European," "African," "South American" or
"Asian."
All in a day's work

An Eremto spokesperson told SPIEGEL ONLINE that most of the
demonstrators were "students, pensioners, or housewives," adding that
the pseudo protestors are free to negotiate their own price with
customers. Most seem to have settled for an all-inclusive price of
Ä145 ($188) for six hours' work, although some can also be hired for
a mere Ä10 an hour. Erento takes 4.9 percent of the money as a
management fee, the rest goes to the demonstrator.

The business model certainly seems to be working -- publishing
congomerate Holtzbrinck, which recently purchased the German
equivalent of Facebook, StudiVZ, bought 13 percent of Erento earlier
this week for an undisclosed sum in the region of Ä1 million to Ä3
million. Erento was founded in 2003 and currently features items and
services to rent in 2,200 categories.

But isn't it problematic if an organization decides to rent
protestors instead of using their own, politically committed
activists? "Each organization has to decide that for itself," the
Erento spokesperson said, explaining that the new category was added
to the Web site as a result of a series of enquiries by organizations
seeking protestors.

However the free market has not entirely overcome political
principle. The demonstrators say they are not available for just any
kind of protest. Those involving neo-Nazis or promoting
discrimination, for example, are out of the question. "The
demonstrators have to decide for themselves what kind of protests
they are willing to participate in," the spokesperson said. "One
person might be in favor of health care reforms, while another might
be against them."

Of course, those prickly health care reforms are currently a hot
topic in German politics. A national association of doctors recently
found itself in hot water after it was revealed that the organization
had hired up to 200 "demonstrators" to take part in a protest against
proposed health care reforms outside the German parliament in Berlin.
Roland Stahl, spokesman for the Association of Statutory Insurance
Physicians (KVB) defended the decision to hire students and the
unemployed as demonstrators. "That wasn't a demonstration, rather a
pure public relations exercise," he told SPIEGEL ONLINE, adding that
hiring people for such events is normal.

Whatever form an organization's public relations exercise takes,
Erento's multi-talented protestors for hire are apparently able to
hold placards and shout slogans, as well as simply make up the needed
numbers to create a mass. Other services presumably need to be
negotiated directly with the contractor, but it seems safe to assume
the rented rebels would be unwilling to throw Molotov cocktails or
fight with police officers -- at least not for Ä10 an hour. This is a
new era of demonstrating, after all.




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