@phnt Personally, I find the reinvent-the-wheel mindset very healthy. It's literally how we got here, how evolution works, but that was not what I wanted to say.
What I wanted to say was this: we are using a protocol that, sooner or later, will get coopted, and the big players will force everybody else to adopt whatever they come up with; so maybe we should start studying the protocol as it is now, find ways to improve on it (even if that means a complete reinvention) and make it capitalism-proof. And we better do it now that when AP becomes AP+Crypto or AP+Meta.
Do you prefer these corpo motherfuckers dictating the terms of what is rightfully ours, @p? Ancap is a contradiction in terms.
@p Not at all. Ancap is a contradiction in terms because anarchism predicates that there should be no rulers (which usually translates into societies based on collaboration), while capitalim, as we can see time and time again, means that whoever owns what you need or want rules over you (i.e., your boss dictates what you do with your time and how much you get paid for it; companies dictate what you pay for goods and services). You can't be an anarchist and a capitalist. You have to choose.
I'm sure most ancaps think of themselves as rebels and anti-system, but they're nothing but useful idiots. (I'm not saying you are an idiot yourself, p, I unironically respect you, but in the words of Darth Vader, “you know it to be true.”)
@p
>> (I'm not saying you are an idiot yourself, p
> You can say it, I've been called worse by friends.
I still wouldn't. I don't know if you consider me a friend, but I do think of you as one. We just disagree on this particular topic.
> anarchism predicates that there should be no rulers
So who stops me from exchanging fungible currency for goods and services?
> You can't be an anarchist and a capitalist.
See attached.
> (I'm not saying you are an idiot yourself, p
You can say it, I've been called worse by friends.
> respect
Shucks and dang, friend.
> in the words of Darth Vader, “you know it to be true.”
I do not believe it to be true, no. I am a Southwesterner by birth and by temperament. I'm happy as long as no one engages in the coercive use of force and that if there is an attempt, I can respond to that attempt. We had this, out in the west, until the glowies set up shop: the bank was as as secure as its ability to defend itself. Some towns didn't want you to enter heavily armed: a collective interested in preserving the security of the collective. I don't have trouble with such an arrangement. Someone comes after me, I'll open fire. It seems reasonable to me: non serviam, sed pacta servabo.
manacts.jpg