Polizeigesetz-Entwurf: Auch Schleswig-Holstein will Verhaltensscanner
Come disattivare Microsoft Recall e impedire all'intelligenza artificiale di scattare screenshot del desktop. | Tuta
Microsoft attiva ora "Recall", una funzione AI di Copilot che rende obsolete le e-mail e la messaggistica privata scattando screenshot ogni pochi secondi.Tuta
A Solarpunk Fractal: Structure and Purpose
Any sufficiently advanced disaster preparedness is indistinguishable from revolutionary dual power. Under the right conditions, all systems are optional. One of the defining properties of a disaster is the fact that it disrupts systems that people rely on. Disaster preparedness could, then, be defined as “a system that makes other systems situationally optional.” This simple fact will let us begin to describe a blueprint with which we can start to build our initial population.
And with that paragraph, we've reached the axis mundi: the central point around which this entire text revolves. Everything written thus far leads logically to it; Everything I will write from here on out one can derive from it. If you remember only one sentence from this entire text, that first sentence is the single most important.
From here we'll get down to technical details about what to build (if you don't already have a better idea). We'll also come back to a couple of variations on the discovery problem. But first, let's go back quite a bit further.
We are trapped by two interlocking systems: capitalism and government. We spend the majority of our lives interacting with these systems, from working and budgeting, to shopping and using public infrastructure. We are trapped within these systems, and therefore vulnerable to abuse by those with the most power in these systems, because we are forced to rely on them.
But what do they have that we actually rely on? What, specifically, would we actually need to replace to no longer rely on these systems?
Dawn of Everything concluded with the suggestion that authoritarian structures emerge from an intermingling of care and violence. Slaves were captured in many societies in order to care for others, to prepare food, harvest crops, or raise children. This is an externalization of care work through the use of violence. Ancient temples and the homes of chiefs, in other cultures, became places of refuge for those outside of other systems: orphans, elderly widows, refugees. They were taken care of, but also may work for the chief or temple in return. The community funded this care, but at some point these people could turn around and work for the temple priests or chiefs, allowing them to assert power over the community. In some ways, we have all become subjects of the sovereign state, both funding the infrastructure that makes our lives possible and being a possessed by it.
We allow both the state and capitalism to exist because they solve an array of commons management problems. Though markets are one of the worst possible ways to sole such problems, because they lead to “the tragedy of the commons,” they are a way to deal with any arbitrary commons in exactly the same way (and thereby destroy everything, but in a systematic, orderly, and well regulated way).
The generic problem we're trying to solve is this:
We have a limited amount of stuff, we have things people need, and we have things people want. How do we make the stuff fulfill the needs and wants?
Traditional economies manage common resources using a combination of government agencies and capitalist markets. These two entities fulfill needs roughly along the following four pillars:
- consumable goods
- durable goods
- infrastructure
- services.
Any viable alternative to the dominant system must fulfill at least these same needs as are currently fulfilled by that dominant system. As the state withers and capitalism collapses, it will become easier to fulfill these needs outside than inside the system. A disaster preparedness to revolutionary strategy, which we will refer to from here on out as “Fractal Anarchism,” should fulfill these needs via bottom-up recursive institutions.
Each level of the social entity can establish (formally or informally) a set of institutional systems to address these needs as aligned with the aforementioned pillars.
These systems are…
- the dispensaryto acquire and distribute consumable goods,
- the library, to acquire and provide shared access to durable goods,
- the works committee, to build, (own,) and maintain infrastructure such as housing,
- the services committee, to identify and provide services, such as child care, for its members.
One may notice that all of these committees are consumption oriented. This matches well with the existing orientation of the dominant economic systems, making it easier to transition from one system to another. Committees start by identifying needs within their domain, then work backwards from consumer, through logistics, to production. Humans also naturally enjoy producing things. Any artist or gardener will tell you the same. This text has been (as of the writing of this section) been entirely written and edited by volunteers. So opportunities may well present themselves to work in both directions and meet-in-the-middle.
Any committee is, by default, authorized to create subcommittees of it's own members to solve challenges related to the completion of the committee mission. While the orientation may be more obvious, it may be harder to notice that these committees may be interrelated. Committees may task other committees with actions, as appropriate. They may also share subcommittees. Both the dispensary and library manage goods, if different types. A shared “logistics” committee may be valuable. Perhaps this would make sense outsourced to the works or services committee.
Following the VSM, each committee has maximum autonomy within it's domain. We have also mentioned that needs are fulfilled via “bottom-up recursive institutions.” Let's unpack that. Today many societies, at least with which an average reader would be familiar, with are largely centralized. Federalism is as close as might commonly be recognized to this type of recursion.
American federalism is a layered model. Towns and cities make up the base. Larger cities may be broken in to districts with some representation. At this “municipal” level, there are generally executive, legislative, and judicial branches. These branches have maximum authority to create and enforce laws, or carry out social programs, to the degree to which these actions don't conflict with the laws at the state or national level. Counties are exactly the same, except that they have additional courts for resolving conflicts between the municipal and county level. They also have other courts and law enforcement capabilities for enforcing laws in unincorporated areas. States are the ultimate authority for all municipal and county systems under their jurisdiction. States have their own constitutions, which override all lower level constitutions, and are overridden by the national one. At the national level, the “federal” government provides the same function for states that state perform for counties and municipalities.
At each level, the level above is responsible for enforcing restrictions on the power system's authority. However, there is no “ultimate authority” above the national level. Put another way, unrestrained authority comes from the top and is enforced down on to the people. This is the problem we previously discussed as essentially being two vulnerabilities:
- The logic of the constraints on the system are defined within the context of the system that is intended to be constrained and all constraints within the system are mutable.
- Power over the constraint logic enforcement mechanism is within the system, thus the system can fail to or choose not to enforce constraint logic.
This seems impossible to solve, and it is for all systems where authority flows from a top level down. This top level can never be restricted because there must always be a level “above it” to maintain and enforce these restrictions. But how do we trust the system at the top? Well, we need a set of rules to control that authority. So we need a system above that one to constrain it. But how do we know…
Any top level authority is necessarily unrestrained, and unrestrainable. But that top level authority is always actually stolen. It is only possible by restricting the autonomy of individuals, by enslaving the population and impressing them into it's service. The answer is quite simple then: reverse the flow of authority.
There's another way to think about this. If freedom and authority are thought of as a commons, that commons must be managed or it will be squandered. By centralizing management of this resource, we incentivize those in control of the resource to hoard it. If we do not manage it, then some will hoard it while bothers will suffer. Only by collectively managing it can we actually make sure everyone gets the maximum that they can without taking from others.
All commons are best managed as locally as possible, by those most impacted. Those most impacted by mismanagement are also those most incentivized to maintain the commons. This would be the inverse of the current system.
Indeed, the whole socioeconomic system is actually just this: commons management. Under capitalism, markets manage labor and goods while the state manages the commons of the markets themselves. Money is simply a stand-in for autonomy, which, at a high enough imbalance, can allow people to control the very machinery of the state's stated goal: “freedom management.” Our autonomy is restricted by the mismangement of these commons via markets and manipulation.
To invert this is to return to the natural root of authority: the individual. The familiar Liberal model of authority is that the individual trades freedom for the protection of the community. All criticisms of Liberal ideology aside, this is exactly not untrue. Individual humans don't tend to live very long on their own in the wild. But why does Liberal ideology refuse to accept such an exit as an option? The question of safety vs autonomy is never posed within the ideology in such a way, but rather relative to authority and violence. It is posed as an answer to “why can people acting on behalf of an authority commit violence?” It's never posed as, “should I be allowed to exit the system if I choose?” Put another way, “Shouldn't I be able to withdraw my authority if I do not feel collective freedom management is working?”
This text works from the answer “yes.”
Now the individual retrains maximum autonomy, yielding autonomy in exchange for the ability to fulfill larger objectives that require coordination. This will be familiar to anyone who has ever lived with another person, giving up the autonomy to do whatever one wishes in exchange for lower costs (by sharing meals, heating, etc) and companionship. Similarly, this will be familiar to anyone who joined an existing organization and done volunteer work. Volunteering one gives up the autonomy to solve a problem their own way in exchange for the efficiency of not having to set up all the infrastructure to solve that same problem. In the later case, authority is always revocable while in the former there may be additional systemic restrictions that make the system harder to leave.
Then the system becomes a recursive volunteer organization: each layer can leave, thus minimizing the friction to exiting the system which forces the system to organize towards the maximum benefit of all members.
Individuals make up the base layer. The individual is maximally autonomous, giving up autonomy to the affinity group in exchange for the ability to achieve greater things. Affinity groups are generally small enough to work by consensus, ranging from 3-10 individuals but usually operating best at around 5. Affinity groups can similarly join together to form a collective. A “spokescouncil” is a system by which affinity groups can choose delegates to send to represent them on such councils. By maintaining small sizes, it can be possible to know other members well enough to accurately represent the interests of each individual during meetings. Collectives can join (federate) together to form a “clusters,” clusters can form “federations,” and federations can form “meta federations.” (Whomever achieves that is more than welcome to name the next level.) When spokescouncils stay small, Each layer can represent all members below their level. Even at 5 levels of recursion, accounting for just over 3k people (assuming 5 in each group), any individual delegate only needs to work with 25 people in total at any time.
As described earlier, the ultimate rejection of authority is to exit the system. In this case, that rejection is built right in. Any member, collective, cluster, federation, federation of federations, and so on, can leave at any time, for any reason. This means that each layer is incentivized to consider the interests of everyone if they wish to achieve their objectives.
Each level fulfills their needs either directly at a given level, or by coordinating to build larger systems. Thus each level will solve more complex variations of similar problems at greater levels of efficiency. Each level will likely operate some variation of the four committees. Within the VSM, each committee will operate as operational units, while each level will also execute a collective management function, such that the remaining systems (2-5) will also be executed at each level.
We will walk through an example implementation of systems 2-5 as recursive systems in the next installment. In the immediately following sections, we will introduce each section again within the context of disaster preparedness.
Individuals
The individual is the smallest unit we will focus on. Individuals are responsible for personal disaster preparedness and supporting collective preparedness via affinity groups. Personal preparedness depends on the disaster situation, but, at a minimum, must cover water, food, shelter/heat, sanitation, and entertainment for at least 72 hours.
Individuals should have at least two ways to achieve any objective. There should, for example, be twice as much water as the minimum needed for any individual. Taking care of additional supplies rapidly become easier as group size grows. One person needs twice the supply of water and food, but 3 people can safely only need supplies for 4 people, and 5 only really needs supplies for 7 to be comfortable. A single pack of playing cards or some dice can easily provide entertainment and distraction for a group when conversation might run out.
Supplies all fall in to the category of a dispensary (or pantry) at the individual level. Libraries and other committees don't exist at this level.
The Affinity Group
An affinity group is generally a group of roughly 3-5 people, but no more than 10. It is small enough that every member knows each other so intimately that they can predict, at a basic level, what decisions others might make in a situation. It is small enough to allow pure consensus democracy. Any group that grows too large should split in to two groups and federate (described in the following section).
At this level, a dispensary can focus on making sure each member has sufficient consumable supplies as well as extra. It would make sure supplies are distributed at different locations to make sure a disaster in one area doesn't destroy all supplies. The affinity group library would track (survival) tool locations and similarly make sure caches are distributed.
It also becomes possible to directly address some of the immediate challenges of capitalism. The same library affinity group library can facilitate tool sharing. A works committee could collaborate to purchase and maintain technical infrastructure such as file shares or mastodon instances. An affinity group could buy and own vehicles (such as cars or e-bikes), vehicle repair facilities, land, or housing.
A services committee could organize foraging to fulfill basic needs such food and soap. It could organize guerilla gardening or support gardening to fill shared pantries. It could organize community dinners. Libraries and dispensaries could distribute things crafted by members, and could even facilitate either giving away supplies or selling them within capitalist markets to fund growth or new activities.
An affinity group must work together to identify it's internal agreements and codify them for future reference. This will be discussed in more depth later, within the context of the VSM and systems 2-5.
Collectives, Clusters, and Federations
In the text we've been using the term “collective” A federation (or “cluster”) is roughly an affinity group of affinity groups. Federations are also recursive, so they can also be federations of federations, or federations of federated federations, etc, to any level. Just as every affinity group needs to figure out how they work together, so does every federation.
Federations are generally expected to coordinate via “spokes councils.” A spokes council is a meeting where appointed representatives speak on behalf of their entities (affinity groups or federations).
As federations grow, more things become possible. An affinity group in the US may be able to reduce costs by getting a shared Costco card or shopping together at a restaurant supply store. A federation of affinity groups may be able start an informal coop. A federation of such federations may be able open a storefront for a coop.
Social Insertion
A fractal is roughly defined as something that has the same shape at multiple levels. We've defined the levels, how they nest and interact, and touched on the shape of these levels. Next we'll talk about the four pillars of the system (dispensary, library, works committee, services committee) in more depth. But in order to build any of those, we'll need to work with someone else.
We've come back to the problem of discovery that we that we pushed away for at the time. But we can't really escape it anymore, so now we need to turn and face it. The nice thing about facing a problem is that sometimes you also realize you can solve other problems at the same time.
Social insertion is the practice drawn from Especifismo (an Anarchist tradition that developed in South America) of working to forward local struggles as members of a specific (political) group. Anarchists, as anarchists, will be involved in groups like Food Not Bombs because it aligns with their existing beliefs. Anarchists, as anarchists, may be involved with campaigns to improve transit infrastructure because car culture feeds petro-fascism and lends itself well to authoritarian social control. These individuals are open about their political alignment and also are honestly working with external organizations. They try, where possible, to work with existing organizations rather than trying to start their own.
This is distinct from “entryism,” where members of a political movement will try to hijack a social movement towards their own ends or will try to take members away from social movements and shift those members to their own, organization controlled, social organizations.
The practice of social insertion can solve two problems. The first is the aforementioned problem of discovery. At any level of organization, doing volunteer work that you identify as important can help you identify other people with similar objectives.
If organizations already exist align with the objectives of fractal anarchism, and these organizations are viable and healthy, there's no reason to duplicate the work of organizing in parallel. Not only that, but organizing in parallel could draw people away from an already valuable organization. It tends to be more efficient to join an existing organization rather than start a new one, both because established organizations have already learned lessons that new ones would need to learn and because established organizations can benefit from scale that a new organization would not quickly achieve.
Even if an organization doesn't completely align with the objectives or optimal structure of your specific group, it may still be useful to participate in those organizations in order to fill gaps in one's own organizing.
Where there exists organizations that are not antithetical to fractal anarchism, individuals, affinity groups, etc, should practice social insertion and support those existing entities. Unless there is a clear reason not to, such as authoritarian organization structures, general non-profit dysfunctionality, bigotry, or other toxic patterns, it's far easier and more efficient to find and support existing organizations as a group than to create one's own.
Food Not Bombs and Mutual Aid Disaster Relief are both excellent examples of organizations that covens should actively work with and support, where possible.
One of the first objectives of a services committee could be to identify local organizations that align with one of the four pillars described earlier and organize members to work with these organizations.
How to Form an Affinity Group
You and your friends already constitute an affinity group, the fundamental building block of anarchist organization. Here’s how affinity groups work and the advantages they offer.CrimethInc.
A Fitness Function for Liberation
The system is dying, consuming itself and everything else to keep going. Even though we all see this plainly, we can't seem to change things because the system keeps adapting. The system is thinking, and it has the ability to out think any individual human. But now we have the tools to build an adaptive system, a genetic algorithm, to move faster than the system can adapt.Now we return again to where we started. We need to escape capitalism. If we can build the new system inside the shell of the old, then we can pivot out. But what do we do to build such a system? We will see in a bit that the answer somewhat implied by the question.
Let's go back a bit though. We're trapped, this much we know. But can we describe how we're trapped, or what we should do about it? The classic response to such traps, to authoritarian overreach, was to establish some kind of bill or declaration of “rights.” This is a list of supposed restrictions on governmental power. Of course these restrictions are almost always ignored, sometimes without ever being enacted in the first place (such as “Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen” from the French Revolution that was ignored until hundreds of years later).
But, as Graeber and Wengrow pointed out in The Dawn of Everything, a lot of freedoms really just boil down to some variation or incomplete specification of the three fundamental freedoms:
(1) the freedom to move away or relocate from one’s surroundings; (2) the freedom to ignore or disobey commands issued by others; and (3) the freedom to shape entirely new social realities, or shift back and forth between different ones.
None of these freedoms are fully recognized by any existing government, and perhaps they can't be. The very nature of government and national sovereignty necessarily limits these, especially the third. If we invert our perspective, we see that the entirety of the BITE model is basically just a list of ways systems of authoritarian control violate these freedoms.But if we change our orientation away from individual freedom and constraint and towards systemic constraint, we can actually resolve these freedoms all back to one single constraint. This one constraint determines the difference between a free system and an authoritarian one:
For a system to be free, participation must be optional for all members.
We can immediately see that freedom to move is one type of participation and freedom to disobey is another. A system is a description of relationships, so exiting one system necessarily requires entering another. One can't exit all systems any more than one could create an object that's not made of any sort of matter. A system is defined by its participation, thus to not-participate is to exit. To exit a system is to create or enter another system, thus the third freedom is also contained within this constraint.
It can be hard to believe that one single constraint can really be the difference. What about all those rights. Surely this one single constraint couldn't take an authoritarian system and suddenly make it free, or a system with a large number of rights suddenly authoritarian. Let's illustrate the difference that this one single constraint can make by two examples.
The rules of Simon Says are maximally authoritarian. You must perform any action ordered, with the only restriction that the authority must say “Simon says” first. Were you forced to stay in this system, it would be the most despotic autocracy possible, completely subject to the wills of one person. This is one step away from literal slavery. But it's not. It's a silly game. The difference is that you can leave at any time.
Let's flip this and imagine a room. During a specific period of time you will have absolute control over everything in this room. In this room you have total freedom. This is not even the limited freedom, the coordinated freedom, the compromising freedom of civil society. You could, without consequence, perform any action you wish in this room. You could say anything, destroy or steal any object, order any individual to perform any action, kill any person in the room with you and take anything they own. This is the sovereign freedom, the absolute freedom, of dictators and kings. The only restriction is that you are not allowed to leave the room while you have this freedom. In fact, you really only have this level of freedom because the room is actually empty other than for you. I am, of course, talking about solitary confinement, a form of internationally recognized torture common in US prisons (including against children).
But, surely, if you simply have enough protections, a complete enough bill of rights, you don't really need this constraint. Surely, with the right structure, with the right checks and balances, with the right list it must be possible to preserve freedom without including this one requirement that people be allowed to exit the system.
No, and I can prove it.
- There will exist actors in a system who will wish to take advantage of others. Evolution drives survival and one strategy for increasing survival in an altruistic society is to become a parasite.
- Expecting exploitative dynamics, a system needs to have a set of rules to manage exploitation.
- If the set of rules is static it will lack the requisite variety necessary to manage the infinite possible behavior of humans so the system will fail.
- If the system is dynamic then it must have a rule set about how it's own rules are updated. This would make the system recursively defined. If you can change a system from within that same system, then you add to it an enumeration of all known mathematical axioms. Any system that can contain mathematics is at least as complex as mathematics. Any system at least as complex as mathematics is necessarily either incomplete or inconsistent (by Gödel's incompleteness theorems).
- If the system is incomplete, then constraints can be evaded which then allow a malicious agent to seize control of the system and update the rules for their own benefit.
- If constraints are incomplete, then a malicious agent can take advantage of others within the system.
- Therefore, no social system can possibly protect freedom unless there exists a single metasystemic constraint (that the system must be optional) allowing for the system to be abandoned when compromised.
Interestingly enough, Gödel is known to have identified an “inner contradiction” within the US constitution in 1947 (called Gödel's loophole). This contradiction could allow the country to be turned into a dictatorship. Following from the logic we've thus far already explored, there are two such vulnerabilities:
- The logic of the constraints on the system are defined within the context of the system that is intended to be constrained and all constraints within the system are mutable.
- Power over the constraint logic enforcement mechanism is within the system, thus the system can fail to or choose not to enforce constraint logic.
The first of these matches closely with the most popular argument that this refers to “Article 5.” Gödel is known to have only explained the issue to Einstein, and the two agreed to not divulge the vulnerability. This is known today as “security through obscurity.” It violates a well established cryptographic principal called “Kerckhoffs's principle,” which was restated by a contemporary of Gödel, Claude Shannon, as “the enemy knows the system.”
Gödel found problems that can't be solved in a field of math called “typographical number theory.” But his theorems were so strong they impacted all of mathematics forever. Not only could “typographical number theory” not solve the problems it set out to solve, Gödel proved that these problems were not possible to solve in any way and under any conditions.
The problems I've described here similarly cannot be fixed. There can exist nothing that operates like a government which can be so constrained as to not become a dictatorship. There are infinitely many ways to write rules that prevent it, and infinitely many ways to circumvent these rules.
Of course neither of those theoretical vulnerabilities matter much anymore, since we watched a proof-by-example exploitation executed in real time. But when the time comes to rebuild, you will be told that the system can be constrained, that it can be fixed, that we can do better. This is a lie. The logical proof of this sitting right on this page. Any system that cannot be abandoned at will is a dictatorship waiting to happen.
But there is good news, and that good news is that same logic works in reverse (though I will leave the formality to someone else and present it as a corollary). Any system with the complexity to handle humans has infinitely many vulnerabilities that allow people to escape from their constraints. Ultimately, all social systems are optional. The question is only the level of work necessary to execute this option.
Oh, you might say, but this just means you have to infinitely abandon systems to retain freedom. Yes, that may be true. But there's an evolutionary advantage to cooperation so there's evolutionary pressure to not be a malicious actor. Thus, a malicious actor being able to compromise the whole system is likely to be a rare event, especially if there are other controls in place. (There are also other ways to mitigate this threat that we'll go in to in another seciton.) Compromising a complex system can be a lot of work, so the first thing a malicious actor would want to do is preserve that work. They would want to lock you in. The most important objective for a malicious actor compromising a system would be to violate that one metasystemic constraint, to make the system mandatory, or all of their work goes out the window as everyone leaves.
And, perhaps, now you understand why borders exist, why fascists are obsessed with maintaining categories like gender, race, ethnicity, etc. This is why even Democrats like Newsom are on board with putting houseless people in concentration camps. And this is why the most important thing anarchists promote is the ability to choose not to be part of any of that.
The implications are interesting enough when we apply this to systems like capitalism or national governments, but there are other very interesting implications when applied to systems like race or gender. Like, as a cis man the only way I can be free to express and explore my own masculinity is if the masculinity I participate in is one which allows anyone the freedom to leave. Then I have an obligation to recognize the validity of nom-masculine trans identity as a necessary component of my own. If I fail to do this, then I trap myself in masculinity and allow the system to control me rather than me to be a free participant in the system.
But if it's OK to escape but not enter, that's it's own restriction that constrains the freedom to leave. It creates a barrier that keeps people in by the fear that they cannot return. So in order for me to be free in my cis masculine identity, I must accept non-masculine trans identities as they are and accept detransitioning as also valid.
But I also need to accept trans-masc identities because restricting entry to my masculinity means non-consensually constraining other identities. If every group imposes an exclusion against others coming in, that, by default, makes it impossible to leave every other group. This is just a description of how national borders work to trap people within systems, even if a nation itself allows people to “freely” leave.
So then, a free masculinity is one which recognizes all configurations of trans identities as valid and welcomes, if not celebrates, people who transition as affirmations of the freedom of their own identity (even for those who never feel a reason to exercise that same freedom).
But you don't need to accept the trap of authoritarian masculinity on logic alone, the proof is right there in male influencers like Andrew Tate and their followers. These dipshits get so obsessed with gatekeeping they don't realize that the gates they're tending keep them in, that the more walls they put up to protect their privilege, the smaller their identity can be. They huddle in tiny pens, terrified of crossing imaginary bounds that they imposed on themselves.
They have built their own torture chambers and locked themselves inside, and for what? They turn themselves into dragons, hoarding what they see as valuable while repressing every emotion including joy. And if they let themselves experience joy, they would, perhaps, realize that all these privileges are inconsistent with it. They might, perhaps, recognize that they have built up these privileges so they don't have to admit that their suffering and fear are not, in fact, admirable. They might have to face the fact that they have lived lives that are deeply pathetic, might have to face the fact that only empathy can give one access to deep satisfaction, might have to face the fact that they have lived their whole lives on a treadmill, going nowhere.
But I assume that they won't ever do that, because to do so would force them to face the enormity of the emotional debt, the pain and suffering they have inflicted on the world, and those are big feelings. It's far easier to hide in a hole, forever alone, making up silly rules to keep everyone inside scared and keep everyone outside from seeing in.
Well kept borders on any system trap everyone, those on the inside and on the out. Then we must add a corollary to our constraint:
A free system can only be kept free if one can freely leave; the freedom of a system is defendant on the existence of other free systems.
Or, to adapt an MLK quote:
Un-freedom anywhere is a threat to freedom everywhere.
The most irritating type of white person may look at this and say, “oh, so then why can't I be <not white>?” Except that the critique of transratial identities has never been “that's not allowed” and has always been “this person didn't do the work.” If that person did the work, they would understand that the question doesn't make sense based on how race is constructed. That person might understand that race, especially whiteness, is more fluid than they at first understood. They might realize that whiteness is often chosen at the exclusion of other racialized identities. They would, perhaps, realize that to actually align with any racialized identity, they would first have to understand the boot of whiteness on their neck, have to recognize the need to destroy this oppressive identity for their own future liberation. The best, perhaps only, way to do this would be to use the privilege afforded by that identity to destroy it, and in doing so would either destroy their own privilege or destroy the system of privilege. The must either become themselves completely ratialized or destroy the system of race itself such being “transracial” wouldn't really make sense anymore.
But that most annoying of white person would, of course, not do any such work. Nevertheless, one hopes that they may recognize the paradox that they are trapped by their white identity, forced forever by it to do the work of maintaining it. And such is true for all privileged identities, where privilege is only maintained through restrictions where these restrictions ultimately become walls that imprison both the privileged and the marginalized in a mutually reinforcing hell that can only be escaped by destroying the system of privilege itself.
Let's go back to the “fuzzing” metaphor. The point of security testing is to find ways to intentionally violate system constraints in ways that threaten the viability of the system. Tests are often prioritized by how great of a threat they are to viability. Being able to delete a patient record in a medical system is extremely bad, but not nearly as bad as being able to expose all those patient records or modify them. There are occasionally single, critical, vulnerabilities that allow an attacker to completely compromise the system.
And there we have it. The most important constraint an authoritarian system has is the constraint against leaving. The most important thing about an authoritarian system is that it absolutely, under all conditions, MUST be mandatory. To violate this constraint is to fundamentally break the control of the system.
Now we return to our earlier question, but restated a little differently: what is the fitness function we use to evolve a system that can find and exploit a vulnerability in an authoritarian system so that we can escape? The fitness function now presents itself:
Maximize the number of people you can help escape from the dominant system, and keep them out of the dominant system, while these people are still able to leave your system.
This doesn't exactly give us a clear solution, but it does restate the problem in a useful way. Oh, but there are three things we need to do. We need a fitness function, we need a recombination (“breeding” is the technical term, but I'm going to try to avoid that) function, and we need an initial population. We have one of these. Next we'll talk about the other two.
saw a Norwegian animated movie trailer on YouTube — what’s the local opinion?
I came across the trailer for a recently released Norwegian animated film on YouTube. It's called "Spermageddon" and it caught my interest.BYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
Disruptieve innovaties zijn van essentieel belang.
Disruptieve innovaties zijn van essentieel belang. Ze kunnen bestaande markten compleet veranderen, nieuwe markten tot stand brengen of belangrijke technologische en maatschappelijke problemen oplossen.Ministry of Economic Affairs (www.linkedin.com)
reshared this
Max reshared this.
Still love my convo's and people here.
@Alison when I used FB my friends did talk about their hobbies and I was also on a lot of special interest groups but the atmosphere was still not as good as Fedi as folk were constantly wary of scammers (with good reason!)
Also algorithms mangled what you saw in favour of adverts, I'd get cat food ads (I don't even have a cat of my own!), and 20 litre packs of engine oil (I only own *one* car).
But things like friends DJ sets would be pushed down the priority so I missed them, in the end I knocked FB on the head as it was more trouble and security risk than it was worth..
The way I look at it if someone doesn't have your number, are you really that close friends?
The Worst Thing About the RAM Shortage That Nobody’s Talking About
https://gizmodo.com/the-worst-thing-about-the-ram-shortage-that-nobodys-talking-about-2000700185?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Tech @tech-Gizmodo
The Worst Thing About the RAM Shortage That Nobody’s Talking About
No matter what, consumers are going to lose.Kyle Barr (Gizmodo)
Mette Thisen (DF) makes a connection between the association LGBT+ and pedophilia.
Mette Thiesen has put on a 'reactionary jester' hat so tightly that she is now out to insinuate that there is a connection between Denmark's oldest politicalBYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
Darts Champ Noa-Lynn van Leuven Opens Up on “Incredibly Painful” Weight of Transphobia
them.us/story/noa-lynn-van-leu…
#transgender #trans #LGBTQ #LGBTQIA
Darts Champ Noa-Lynn van Leuven Opens Up on “Incredibly Painful” Weight of Transphobia
Leuven has been the subject of backlash, with even some of her former teammates speaking out.Samantha Riedel (Them.)
AirPods Might Get a Big Dose of AI
https://gizmodo.com/airpods-might-get-a-big-dose-of-ai-2000700184?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Tech @tech-Gizmodo
AirPods Might Get a Big Dose of AI
A leaked iPhone prototype is giving some insight into future feature AirPods features.James Pero (Gizmodo)
1. I am building a life that fits my nervous system, not one that looks impressive.
2. Hugs given to me by people who enjoy me.
3. That my inner world is changing for the better, through acceptance. I am healing.
@3goodthings #selflove #Selfacceptance #connection #love #3GoodThingsToday #3goodthings
Katwijkers krijgen 'prullenbak' die opgeblazen mag worden met oud en nieuw
De gemeente probeert zijn inwoners bewust te maken van alle vuurwerkschade tijdens de jaarwisseling.NOS Nieuws
globalist.it/tendenze/2025/12/…
Notoriamente il razzismo corre sulle gambe della disinformazione e dell'allarmismo
Sondaggi: molti europei credono (erroneamente) che i migranti irregolari siano più di quelli legali
In Gran Bretagna, Danimarca, Francia, Germania, Italia e Spagna, tra il 44% e il 60% degli intervistati ritiene che ci siano “molti” o “abbastanza” migranti presenti illegalmente rispetto a quelli presenti legalmente.globalist (Globalist.it)
San Francisco woman gives birth in a Waymo self-driving taxi
sfgate.com/business/article/sa…
#technology #tech #innovation #engineering #business #technews #gadgets
Three ways the Trump Administration endangered public health last week... youtube.com/shorts/ytiKr...
How did the US endanger Americ...
- YouTube
Auf YouTube findest du die angesagtesten Videos und Tracks. Außerdem kannst du eigene Inhalte hochladen und mit Freunden oder gleich der ganzen Welt teilen.youtube.com
Beverley reshared this.



Jeroen Baert
in reply to bert hubert 🇺🇦🇪🇺🇺🇦 • • •bert hubert 🇺🇦🇪🇺🇺🇦
in reply to Jeroen Baert • • •Blender Dumbass ( J.Y.Amihud ) reshared this.
Jeroen Baert
in reply to bert hubert 🇺🇦🇪🇺🇺🇦 • • •bert hubert 🇺🇦🇪🇺🇺🇦
in reply to Jeroen Baert • • •WeeChat, the extensible chat client
weechat.org