Greenpeace: Economy
Everyone's entitled to an opinion. Voice yours at forum.greenpeace.org
Advertising Agency: Ogilvy Beijing, China
Executive Creative Directors: Nils Andersson, Wilson Chow, Andrew Lok
Creative Directors: Andrew Lok, Wilson Chow
Copywriters: Matthew Curry, Andrew Lok
Art Directors: He Shi Yang, Wilson Chow, David Seah, Nils Andersson
Photographer: Corbis
Retouching: He Shi Yang



Comments
guys! but y bush??....
Wow.. "everyone is entiteled to an opinion" coming from china is feeling weird
lol...true. Show this ad to the Tibetians...i'm sure they will fail to find the humour. It's easy to preach and point fingers.
life's got just one figure of speech.....irony!
exactly!!
Everyone in China is entitled to the same opinion.
I knew an other ad, but with the picture from Hu Jintao
"Shot some monks...
keep smiling
more natural resources for China!"
"everyone is entiteled to an opinion"...
They are afraid to use their own politician or head of state.
Using Bush is really much too simple...
He (USA) is not the only one who rip the plant. (2nd place China)
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**-->If you pay with nuts you will served by monkeys.<--**
If you pay with nuts you will served by monkeys.
Go to a web forum to voice your opinion ...
Exercise your right of free speech ...
And that coming from a chinese agency ...
Where have you been the last couple of weeks (or decades)? In cryo-sleep?
bad art direction.
Individuality is fine. As long as we all do it together.
I'm not from China, but I still find it strange that a Chinese ad firm gets held accountable for the acts of its government - when we don't really seem to be putting down the American ad firms for what Bush has done? Just my 2 cents...
www.majorityworld.com
It seems that saving money is the most practical way to survive an economic recession, but on the contrary can be very harmful to a diminishing economy. Economists call it the "paradox of thrift", according to the Wall Street Journal. Another example is if you avoided getting payday loans but then found out you bounced a check and found out that was much more expensive. This also applies to deflation. Deflation results in lower prices and increases the value of money. The pessimistic part of this is you are going to really need those lower prices if you end up facing unemployment because your employer cut production just to meet competitive prices. Not really a pretty picture, right? However, there is good news, just like how payday loans are good news for people seeking to avoid late fees or overdraft charges. There is a very small chance that this recession will lead to deflation. Most economists agree that we will probably not see deflation anytime soon, and Feds are saying that things will get worse before they get better. So does that mean there is hope? But for the meantime, payday loans are available for your short term financial emergencies.
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