This happens to me pretty frequently.
I think is alright, language is a bridge and sometimes we feel more comfortable speaking our native language than others. But I don't really mind speaking in English or Spanish with people I meet in Brazil. But the moment of realization that you are talking with another native speaker is always full of joy.
#feels-nice to speak with other bilingual or polyglots :)
Nice work Jacob :) I like your piece. I do get the feeling your photo-bashing is getting better with each iteration
This doesn't have the right to be this entertaining!
Direct Action (doing) > Electoralism (asking for permission)
Remember, the whole point of social mobilization is to be able to use social force so people is able, more and more, to change their situation, to help them see they can change things if we organize and respect each other in solidarity. The issue with voting, is not the vote itself, that's whatever. Is that all that effort helping putting a "new boss" in the old position, could have been put in working towards social organization.
Do remember to learn about politics, and why anarchist do what we do. Is not because of being a square, is because social organizations are the most effective way to deal with all those issues you see politicians go in circles and circles, and you just got really stigmatized about the beliefs that political participation is electoralism. It is not, political action is way more than that: is making water and food access a right, is helping people without a ceiling improve their living conditions, is about creating industry and fighting business, etc.
Now, if you feel uncomfortable with this idea, maybe you are more aligned with social democracy and those other kinds of socialism that ain't really into the working with each-other thing, but in need of an elite of help you move through everyday bullshit. The same ones that put us in this precarious position to begin with. Organized anarchism is about helping and solidarity, federalism and autonomy, not dependence on bosses. We find problems, we deal with them.
This is really noice.
Fuck it, from where I come from: people in agriculture get smacked just by existing or trying to build common cause with "let's end hunger in the world". I'm with you, salutations from America Latina ! And let's make those fuckers get what they deserve.
Oh that's one of the fat ones. But not all of 'em, keep on searching and you'll eventually find the (highly disgusting) answers!
Here from the South America: Now, Imagine Who Funds The US
I always thought that artificial languages always needed more stickiness. I learned some Esperanto, but it is easily forgotten if there is no need to use it.
Solarpunk, like many Libertarian Socialist paradigms, really shines with diversity, so languages focused on Solarpunk sound quite weird, like having homogeneous aesthetics. Usually, language changes, like the way Zapatistas talk in Spanish, pursue specific goals that can be done within a language rule set or some mixture between different languages like Spanglish (Spanish + English) or Portuñol (Portuguese + Spanish). The whole point is to be able to communicate a concept.
Now, like the examples you have shown, it seems easier to frame the "Solarpunk language" not as a language per se but as a dialect. Since some geographies share more common communication than between language speakers, it happens in English, Arab, Spanish, French, and Chinese... When you learn to speak those, there is always the question of whether you sound like a foreign person or a native from someplace.
Fellas, the FOSS team gets +1 c:
I understand your point of view since I have shared it for a long time.
It's just that, you'll notice, the way the social system is framed makes it impossible to have those things. The argument is that, as long as there is a hierarchy, you don't have a say in how things are run: others will decide for you, and those others have interests that don't align with the well-being of all to increase their power. Ala, power begets power, or money attracts more money. As you have seen, it occurred in the news or economic analysis.
Now, that's my position, and I align with eco-anarchism. So, to be fair to you and give you space to find your own answers, I invite you to study the subject of politics. So, to point you in the general direction of people (like anarchists) who care about open education (since our interest is Libertarian Socialist society and not seizing power but creating new institutions of consensus and democracy), I'll point you to the YouTube channel of WHAT IS POLITICS? who helped me navigate the most common questions about the subject in a 101 style. Mainly to avoid falling into the trap of "worbs," which are words that mean nothing. You have found many of those, but he'll help you catch them when you hear them.
Keep in mind that the subject of politics can be studied from many angles since it is really complex. And one thing is sure: no "objective" studies about the subject exist since everything is checked with different interests in mind. You don't study why some people are poorer than others if your goal is not to solve the issue. Another example is PraggerU's changing history, facts, and data to perpetuate the validation of the capitalist hierarchies. Do you get me?
I hope this helps you to understand the problem better. It is a challenging subject, so take your time to learn at your own pace, and if you need any sources to study the topic from a libertarian socialist perspective, feel free to send me a message.
Take care!
TLDR: I agree with the funny meme.
Well, you see. That's the promise that has been made to us since birth. We even grew socialized to live like that's what we are supposed to get. In a sense, most of the estate socialism I know of is focused on what you say.
Yet, after so many years living in this system, I'm convinced that asking nicely or having hierarchies just doesn't cut it because the mere existence of an asymmetry in power means we are the ones under the boot. Money is just a reflection of that asymmetry. It can buy you governors, mass media, hired guns, etc.
As long as that difference of political power exists, no matter how "fairer" it can be, as long as you are on the side of the governed, we are on the losing end, my friend.
And you wanna know the saddest part? We, the people, are bombarded every day with propaganda focused on dividing us and discouraging us from pursuing how we can organize with each other in a way more organic way. But, of course, the discourse of hate is against ethnic groups, genders, sexual preferences, and religions... The media they own (the majority we can access) will try their best to deflect the fault of everything happening with justice and ecology to us instead of them.
Well, anyway, have a good one friend!
I want you to know that: I always check your post and I want to collaborate sharing academic texts and other sources. And I really appreciate your work so far :) Thanks for your determination friend
YouTube Video
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Sharing some eco-anarchism for our solarpunk hommies.
BTW, a shout-out to the https://freetubeapp.io/ project.
Hey everyone, fellow anarchist. I just wanted to take a moment to celebrate:
- Protestors all around the north stopped Israel help, thefore helping Palestines.
- EZLN dynamism to adapt to ever-changing situations and a great sense of humor.
- Protests Against Cop City in Atlanta helps counter-act authoritarianism in a country that historically has been the empire.
- AANES/Rojava territories exist and keep on giving a great fight against all odds.
- The Myanmar resistance against their fascist opponent where the alliance is giving them a run for their money.
I share this mostly because I'm are coming out of a very upsetting situation that I'm sure many people share.
To share the feeling that the world and our friends Solarpunks are imagining is being made in the middle of gardens where bullets fly like mosquitoes in the jungle. Too many. And it is always in our hands to take the necessary actions to put the seeds of empathy and international solidarity. To combat bigotry and hate speech while giving hope to those around us.
We are not saviors, not at all. People can only save themselves, and it is that friendly hand, the shoulder where you can cry, and the compañerxs you can trust who push and guide us to see in this significant penumbra.
So, l want to celebrate that you guys exist. You artists who imagine the future; you freedom-fighters; you who choose to identify as or decided to love a man, woman, or non-binary people; you workers who share their know-how; you parents who care for the future; you from the global south or north; you from whatever skin color you were born with: I celebrate you, and I applaud your work so far.
Let me know of any progress I may have missed in my message of individuals striving for autonomy and acknowledgment so that we can celebrate their achievements even more.
I hope you all have a great day, and remember that, at least from this geography of South America, at least one capybara is celebrating you.
Simone Weil The Iliad, or The Poem of Force 1945
> "Force is that which makes a thing of whoever submits to it. Exercised to the extreme, it makes the human being a thing quite literally, that is, a dead body. Someone was there and, the next moment, no one. The Iliad never tires of presenting us this tableau [...]
> The force that kills is summary and crude. How much more varied in operation, how much more stunning in effect is that other sort of force, that which does not kill, or rather does not kill just yet. It will kill for a certainty, or it will kill perhaps, or it may merely hang over the being it can kill at any instant; in all cases, it changes the human being into stone. From the power to change a human being into a thing by making him die there comes another power, in its way more momentous, that of making a still living human being into a thing. He is living, he has a soul; he is nonetheless a thing. Strange being—a thing with a soul; strange situation for the soul! Who can say how it must each moment conform itself, twist and contort itself? It was not created to inhabit a thing; when it compels itself to do so, it endures violence through and through."
Simone Weil on her text about The Iliad, or The Poem of Force
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I was introduced to Simone Weil and her thoughts on the force by a philosopher I admired when he spoke about this poem while discussing the war in Palestine with his audience. I find them to be profound. By far, it has been the definition of force I find more natural to talk about when I reflect on the nature of violence.
You guys might like it or discuss it.
Keep on fighting the good fight, fellow compañeros.
Hey everyone, I wanted to share Pantube for Spanish speakers around here. It's a collective effort by many content creators all around the internet. They are just beginning, so I want to help expose this project to the rest of the world :)
YouTube Video
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Our good compañero Andrewism just uploaded a new video about Solarpunk. In this case, he's covering plants and their many uses for our future solarpunk societies.
- YouTube: https://youtu.be/IRuVzRJe-z4
- Invidious: https://invidious.snopyta.org/watch?v=IRuVzRJe-z4
Hope you all enjoy it.