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       Cricket-Activated 
        Defense System 
      Redefining 
        Biotech in the Political Ecosystem. 
         
         
      The 
        CADS project - designed in response to illegal logging activity in California's 
        threatened redwood forests - is an accreted version of trickle-down technologies 
        from the military/industrial complex which explores interspecies collaboration 
        in the fight to save endangered environments. Relying on the crickets' 
        unique audible responses to human encroachment as well as their strategic 
        positioning on the borders between logged and unlogged regions, CADS establishes 
        a system of deterrence through the technological augmentation of natural 
        systems. Serving both as a critique of hegemonic logic and as a tactical 
        tool for a disempowered community, CADS redefines "biotech" 
        within a political ecosystem.  
      The 
        CADS Project, or cricket-missile system, consists of three main components: 
        1) the technology, 2) the implementation/installation of the technology, 
        and 3) the demonstration of the technology. The technology itself is an 
        electronic device that receives distressed cricket chirps and translates 
        the sound into a firing signal for anti-logger missiles. The device is 
        a form of extreme bioengineering that simply recombines consumer surveillance 
        products (essentially "bugging" devices) with model rockets 
        - both trickle-down goods from the military-industrial complex.  
      Installation 
        of CADS typically takes place along logging roads at the border between 
        logged areas and old-growth, redwood forests currently threatened by illegal 
        logging. Crickets are the ideal guardians of this area since they naturally 
        take up the perimeter and have evolved to transmit a very precise frequency 
        should they feel threatened by the encroachment of an invasive species. 
        To avoid a misfire, the system is activated only when a significant number 
        of the cricket population voice their consternation over a relatively 
        broad area.  
      By 
        technologically augmenting the natural responses of crickets, the success 
        of CADS relies not only on interspecies collaboration but also on the 
        collective efforts of a greatly disempowered community. This relationship 
        is further highlighted in a public lecture/demonstration in which attendees 
        from various disciplines (art, engineering, biology, environmental science, 
        etc) gather to form an academic ecosystem. The CADS presentation explores 
        cricket morphology, surveillance technology, and the political ecology 
        of forestry before culminating in a cricket-assisted demonstration launch. 
        Afterwards, the ensuing Q & A consistently encourages a lively discussion 
        that engages militaristic rhetoric, political obfuscation, and the polemics 
        of "violence" along with notions of creative resistance and 
        interdisciplinary social practices. 
      This 
        performance-lecture/demonstration has been successfully enacted at the 
        University of California, Santa Cruz and will also be presented in late 
        February in the final panel at the College Art Association Conference 
        in New York.  
       
       
       
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