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Abbreviation | TZM |
---|---|
Formation | 2008; 16 years ago (2008) |
Type | Advocacy group |
Region served | International |
Key people | Peter Joseph |
Website | TheZeitgeistMovement.com |
The Zeitgeist Movement (TZM) is an activist movement established in the United States in 2008 by Peter Joseph. TZM was the subject of a case study by a London School of Economics researcher who studies political sociology and social movements. In his essay, he described the movement as having a "synthesized emancipatory worldview based on the implicit themes of cosmopolitanism, secularism, the explicit themes of systems-thinking, and promise of postscarcity globally redistributive (resource-based) economics. These perspectives challenge the conventional paradigms of nationalism, religion, modernism, and neoliberal capitalist globalization, respectively." Huffington Post reporter Travis Donovan summarized the movement's charter as highlighting "that there are individuals who believe in a sustainable future where humanity is not united by religious or political ideology, but by the scientific method, venerated as the savior that can develop a system of human equality, thriving from the cooperation and balance of technology and nature".
History
The Zeitgeist Movement was formed in 2008 by Joseph shortly after the late 2008 release of Zeitgeist: Addendum, the second film in the Zeitgeist film series.
Zeitgeist was first linked to the Venus Project. In April 2011, partnership between the two groups ended in an apparent power struggle, with Joseph commenting, "Without , doesn’t exist – it has nothing but ideas and has no viable method to bring it to light."
The first Zeitgeist documentary which predates the organization Zeitgeist movement, borrowed from the works of Eustace Mullins, Lyndon LaRouche, and radio host Alex Jones. Much of its footage was taken directly from Alex Jones documentaries.
The group holds an annual event, Z-Day (or Zeitgeist Day), an "educational forum" held in March. The New York Times reported on the second Z-Day held at Manhattan Community College in New York in 2009 which included lectures by Peter Joseph and Jacque Fresco. This event sold out with 900 people paying $10 each to attend. The event's organizers said that 450 connected events in 70 countries around the globe also took place.
Reactions
An article in the Journal of Contemporary Religion describes the movement as an example of a "conspirituality", a synthesis of New Age spirituality and conspiracy theory.
Michelle Goldberg of Tablet Magazine called the movement "the world's first Internet-based apocalyptic cult, with members who parrot the party line with cheerful, rote fidelity." In her opinion, the movement is "devoted to a kind of sci-fi planetary communism", and the 2007 documentary that "sparked" the movement was "steeped in far-right, isolationist, and covertly anti-Semitic conspiracy theories."
Alan Feuer of The New York Times said the movement was like "a utopian presentation of a money-free and computer-driven vision of the future, a wholesale reimagination of civilization, as if Karl Marx and Carl Sagan had hired John Lennon from his "Imagine" days to do no less than redesign the underlying structures of planetary life."
See also
- Anti-consumerism
- Criticism of capitalism
- Environmental movement
- Environmentalism
- Money Free Party
- Post-growth
- Post-scarcity economy
- Structural fix
- Technocracy
- Technological utopianism
- Yellow socialism
References
- Cooper, Brent. "The Zeitgeist Movement: Alter-globalization, Complexity, and Conspirituality". Scribd. Retrieved March 5, 2021.
- Donovan, Travis. "The Zeitgeist Movement: Envisioning A Sustainable Future". Huffington Post. Retrieved March 5, 2021.
- ^ Gore, Jeff (October 12, 2011). "The view from Venus Jacque Fresco designed a society without politics, poverty and war. Will it ever leave the drawing board?". Orlando Weekly. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
- Cohn, Shane (May 12, 2011). "New world re-order". VCReporter. Retrieved May 28, 2015.
- ^ Goldberg, Michelle (February 2, 2011). "Brave New World". Tablet. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
- ^ Feuer, Alan (March 17, 2009). "They've Seen the Future and Dislike the Present". The New York Times. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
- Ward, Charlotte; Voas, David (2011). "The Emergence of Conspirituality". Journal of Contemporary Religion. 26 (1): 109–111. doi:10.1080/13537903.2011.539846. S2CID 143742975.
External links
- Media related to The Zeitgeist Movement at Wikimedia Commons