Games from older consoles are being made less and less available to the point so much of the industry's history could easily vanish without

seen from Malaysia

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Games from older consoles are being made less and less available to the point so much of the industry's history could easily vanish without
This podcast episode was a joint collaboration between Srsly Wrong and the Institute for Social Ecology outlining the social ecologist critique of hierarchy. I recommend it wholeheartedly to anyone interested in Murray Bookchin, social ecology, or solarpunk
"Unlike the myth of capitalism, which claims to compensate workers for their labor fully, the actual nature of capitalism is that ownership by the capitalist class of tools, the means of production, and sufficient resources to keep workers alive while they create goods and services allows them to steal part of the worker's labor and claim it as their property (see surplus value). Library socialism instead offers another means of distributing goods, both capital and consumer. It provides a way to make us all much more affluent on average, distributing goods and services to where they solve the most needs, not just to where they generate the most profits for a few. And by sharing items, it means that fewer items can satisfy the wants of a society completely."
If there were only a single thing that I could make you learn about on this blog it would be library socialism. Not to sound like an evangelist but I sincerely believe that it's the best chance we have for a social order that can meet all human needs, including the need to sustain our habitat.
me convincing you it's not a piss kink, it's good practice
A sketch of a library pickup vehicle, inspired by Srsly Wrong Podcast's Morning in Utopia episode.
Borrowed items are left in a crate on pickup day to be delivered back to the library of everything to be refurbished and placed back on shelves. This trike is for small items while larger ones are gathered on an arranged pickup day by flatbed trike.
Love the Wrong Boys, they were my introduction to anarchism beyond the academic and have a great sense of humour and solid humanity to them.