First Seen
2023-05-10T21:03:33+00:00
simple-description (llama3.2-vision_11b)
The meme is a satirical commentary on the concept of a 3% raise, which is often touted as a significant increase in pay. However, when considering the impact of inflation, a 3% raise is actually a 1% pay cut due to the rising cost of living. The image features a character with a sarcastic expression, implying that the "raise" is actually a joke. The text above the image reads, "When you get a 3% raise but inflation is 7.5%."
detailed-analysis (gemma3-27b-vision)
Okay, let's break down this meme through several theoretical lenses. I'll only include sections where the theory meaningfully applies.
## Visual Description
The image is a stock photo featuring an older white man seated at a desk, ostensibly in an office setting. He's giving a thumbs-up with a forced, strained smile. The image quality is standard stock photo fare – clean, well-lit, and somewhat generic. A laptop is open on the desk, and a pair of glasses rest nearby. The background is neutral – a wall and a lamp. Text overlays the image: "When you get a 3% raise but inflation is 5.4% 6.2% 6.8% 7.5%". The text is presented as if showing an increasing trend of inflation.
## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis
This meme powerfully illustrates how discourse around economic metrics (raises, inflation) shapes our understanding of power dynamics. A genealogical approach would trace the history of these concepts – “raise,” “inflation,” “percentage” – and reveal how they aren’t neutral, objective measures, but constructed through specific historical power relations.
Power/Knowledge: The meme reveals the interplay of power and knowledge. "Inflation" isn’t merely a natural economic phenomenon; it’s defined and measured* by institutions (governments, central banks) that wield significant power. The constant "updating" of inflation percentages through text suggests the power of statistical control, defining and shaping economic reality.
Disciplinary Power: The meme subtly highlights the disciplinary effects of economic discourse. The forced smile and thumbs-up from the man suggest a coerced positivity despite the reality of diminishing purchasing power. He is performing* a compliant acceptance of a system where his gains are systematically eroded. The meme mocks the "good worker" ideology that pushes individuals to accept whatever small gains are offered, even when the overall system disadvantages them.
* Normalization: The meme draws on the normalization of economic precariousness. The increasing inflation percentages becoming everyday knowledge and being presented alongside a small raise normalizes the idea that individual efforts are inadequate to counteract broader economic forces.
## Marxist Conflict Theory
This meme is fundamentally rooted in Marxist conflict theory.
* Class Struggle: The meme exemplifies the inherent conflict between labor (the worker) and capital (those who own the means of production). The 3% raise represents the share of profit given to labor, while the rising inflation represents the accumulation of capital by the owners of those means. The meme visually demonstrates that any gain for the worker is quickly undermined by broader economic forces that benefit the owning class.
Exploitation/Surplus Value: Inflation effectively reduces the real* wage of the worker. Even with a raise, the worker's purchasing power decreases, meaning the owners are extracting a greater portion of the value created by labor. The meme captures the feeling of being exploited despite surface-level “compensation.”
* Alienation: The forced smile on the man’s face represents a kind of alienation – a disconnection between his efforts and the results, and a forced acceptance of a system that is not working in his favor. He is alienated from the fruits of his labor.
* False Consciousness: The thumbs-up suggests an attempt to present a positive facade despite a worsening economic situation, indicative of a "false consciousness" where individuals are unaware of the true extent of their exploitation.
## Postmodernism
While not as central as Marxist analysis, a postmodern reading is possible:
Deconstruction of Economic Narrative: The meme subtly deconstructs the seemingly objective narrative of economic progress. It shows that numbers like “3%” and “7.5%” aren’t neutral facts, but socially constructed values with subjective impacts. The meme highlights the gap between the representation of economic health and the lived experience* of economic insecurity.
Simulacra and Simulation: The forced positivity of the man's thumbs-up could be seen as a simulacrum* – a copy without an original. He is performing a gesture of happiness that is disconnected from any genuine economic benefit.
* Irony and Parody: The meme relies heavily on irony and parody. It’s a satirical commentary on the absurdity of celebrating a small raise when it is immediately eroded by inflation.
Let me know if you'd like a more detailed elaboration on any of these points or want to explore other theoretical angles.
simple-description (llama3.2-vision)
This meme is a humorous take on a stock market scenario. The image shows a person sitting at a desk, with a caption that reads: "When you get a 3% raise but inflation is 7.5%". The text is written in a playful, sarcastic tone, implying that the person's raise is not enough to keep up with the rising cost of living.
tesseract-ocr
When you get a 3% raise but inflation is 54% G2% 8% ~~ f oe : , + biz a yo