Our Philosophy
Humanity has always strived for symbols. Symbols unite, inspire, and challenge established norms. The symbol of freedom must not obey formal rules, bureaucratic restrictions, or political borders. It is the symbol of the human spirit without limits.
A Symbol Beyond Control
Our idea — to draw a giant provocative symbol on the Moon — is not just provocation, but a peaceful and legal challenge to all forms of power, control, and restrictions imposed by society. In ancient times, obelisks and statues symbolized power and fertility, while in the culture of the 20th and 21st centuries, the phallic symbol became an expression of absolute independence and ironic defiance of social norms.
Like in the works of Banksy, constantly defying the system, or in the performances of avant-garde artist Maurizio Cattelan, our symbol is rebellion against any form of control.
Why the Moon?
The Moon was never a random choice. Since ancient times, it has been a symbol of the unknown and unreachable — a dream of humanity. The conquest of the Moon in 1969 became the pinnacle of human ambition. To place such a symbol there is to continue the tradition of challenging the impossible.
Most importantly, this symbol will be indelible, visible from anywhere on Earth, simply by looking up at the sky. And while any bureaucrat or censor will want to ban or destroy it, no state structure will ever unite as freely as the free people of Earth — nor justify funding to “paint over” our symbol on the Moon.
Existential Gesture
Humanity is tired of the endless chase for meaning, efficiency, and results. We declare: “Enough!” It is time to free ourselves from this burden.
Our lunar project demonstrates the absurdity of existence, as understood by existentialist philosophers — Camus, Sartre, and Kierkegaard. For Camus, life is absurd, and the only thing left for humans is to accept it and create their own meaning — even if it shocks and provokes.
The project also echoes the ideas of the Dadaists and Surrealists of the early 20th century, who rejected logic and practical value while reshaping perception and reality.
Echoes in Pop Culture
Similar forms of absurd protest can be found in the works of Chuck Palahniuk, the series “Rick and Morty,” and films by the Coen brothers — where absurdity is celebrated rather than condemned, and unpredictability is embraced rather than hidden.
The Final Gesture
Our lunar phallic symbol is an existential gesture that tells the world: sometimes the best thing we can do is not to do anything useful or rational, but simply accept the absurdity of being and mark it with a bold act.
This is not just provocation. It is a manifesto of freedom — a challenge and acceptance of absurdity — a symbol that every human on Earth can see by looking at the night sky, realizing that boundaries exist only in our minds.
We are fulfilling the secret yet natural human desire: to draw a dick everywhere.