I've been asked to make some recommendations on radical media.
the reason was the following post:
https://todon.nl/@paulfree14/102278669580943823
So I just quickly copy + pasted a list full with radical media, that most of them I can highly recomment to read/watch/listen and to share their content regulary.
Much is missing, it's not well organized, but feel free to take a look, to add more to the wiki, and to share your favs. through your webpages/social media.
https://hub.libranet.de/wiki/paulfree14/anarchist(20)media/Home
#purism has killswitches for wifi,
but we need killswitches for nazis.
https://todon.nl/@paulfree14/102270016915041482
and
https://todon.nl/@paulfree14/102276025533599595
If you have a choise to decide wether you are antifacism or not, you're in a privilidged position many don't have.
To them, antifascism means survival.
If you choose to be against that, you choose to be an enemey, from a position that holds you so comfortable, that you have the power to choose differently.
You can have made wrong decisions in the past, but you can learn to not to the same in future. It is your responsibility.
Start with listening to whom antifascism means survival.
#BryanLunduke
Could just be the crowd I'm in, but even Instagram has a web app. I hope for support in the future!
It's strange to me how relatively unpopular free software is outside of computer people and academic circles. I mean, it's the capitalism of course, but it also seems to me that people are often deluded into thinking their lack of freedom IS freedom. Again, the capitalism. They're great at propaganda, but I sense a red (and maybe black) spectre haunting in the distance
The fact is that I don't give a shit about free software in itself.
That's a #Stallman perspective: I can respect it, but I don't care.
Software freedom is a mean to a goal.
To some it's a mean to enter and gain control of a market.
To me it's a mean to free people not just as user of a specific tool, but as a whole.
Debugging teach people how to reason rationally and THAT is the goal, not the software.
Learning to program is a human right, just like learning to read and write.