Questions for the Kaiju Mission Arts Department

A running compilation of questions for the Kaiju Mission Arts Department to consider. Last updated by the Field Office on June 20, 02026.

Questions for the Kaiju Mission Arts Department

A running compilation of questions for the Kaiju Mission Arts Department to consider. Last updated by the Field Office on June 20, 02026.

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New to the Arts Department? Access the The Kaiju Mission Arts Department Creative Brief.


Questions from KAIJU FIELD REPORT No. 7:

What might our shared futures be if we rejected the violent construct of borders and settler violence? 

 What might our shared futures be if we took collective responsibility for our home—not just with other humans, but with our more-than-human neighbors?

Questions from KAIJU FIELD REPORT No. 8:

We wonder what a future without A.I., eugenics, and violent exploitation of land, water, and life might look and feel like. 

Questions from KAIJU FIELD REPORT No. 9:

What might our shared futures be like if we did not have to contend with anti-Indigenous racism, and racism overall?

Questions from KAIJU FIELD REPORT No. 10:

What might our shared futures look like if we trusted kids?

What might our shared futures look and feel like if we moved through the world as though every child was ours to model for? What might a world rooted in a love ethic feel like? 

Questions from KAIJU FIELD REPORT No. 11:

We wonder what our shared futures might be like without manufactured consent [for fascistic violence]—futures where we have the time, nuance, and regulated nervous systems to think and act for ourselves. Futures where we can explore our shared humanity and get curious about any knee-jerk, xenophobic reactions?

Questions from KAIJU FIELD REPORT No. 12:

What might our shared futures look and feel like if we developed the collective capacity to grieve fully and honestly? 

What might our shared future(s) look and feel like when we have rejected the idea of the rugged, heroic individual? When we have removed celebrity from our ideas of liberation?

 What might our shared future(s) look and feel like when more of us practice hope as a grounded discipline?

What might our shared future(s) look and feel like once we no longer feel powerless? 

Questions from KAIJU FIELD REPORT No. 13:

What might our shared futures look and feel like if we collectively turned to face these polluting industries and their profiteers head-on? 

What might our shared futures look like if we did not treat our more-than-human neighbors with disdain, but worked in collaboration with them and prioritized co-existence instead of domination?