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  • It would probably be at least somewhat determined by what you're physically close to, and what a person's capabilities and interests are (one that opted for medical training could be rotated into needed medical roles), plus what they're personally willing to do.

    we’re still in the position of a dystopian “today it’s your turn to work in the salt mines, comrade” decision being made by a higher power, and imposed by law.

    There would be no state government in a libertarian anarchist society, and no institution that could force anyone to do anything against their will (if anything like that began to form, it would be in society's best interest to dismantle it).

    Ultimately the 2 to 3 months of work would have to be entirely voluntary, otherwise it would be dystopia.

    You may then think that the whole concept comes crashing down in a house of cards, as there's simply no way anyone would engage in that essential work without some coercive force above them making them do it, and thus everything becomes unmaintained, and everyone tries to free-ride on it until the the whole system collapses on itself. But this issue has been pondered for over 100 years now, and there are compelling counter-arguments that it's still extremely viable.

    As an example, this aspect was discussed at length by Peter Kropotkin in The Conquests of Bread (specifically Chapter 12: Objections).

    It also breaks down why the Authoritarian Marxist argument of forcing people to work will only lead to the same conditions we're trying to escape from:

    “But the danger,” they say, “will come from that minority of loafers who will not work, and will not have regular habits in spite of excellent conditions that make work pleasant. To-day the prospect of hunger compels the most refractory to move along with the others. The one who does not arrive in time is dismissed. But a black sheep suffices to contaminate the whole flock, and two or three sluggish or refractory workmen lead the others astray and bring a spirit of disorder and rebellion into the workshop that makes work impossible; so that in the end we shall have to return to a system of compulsion that forces the ringleaders back into the ranks. And is not the system of wages paid in proportion to work performed, the only one that enables compulsion to be employed, without hurting the feelings of the worker? Because all other means would imply the continual intervention of an authority that would be repugnant to free men.” This, we believe, is the objection fairly stated.

    It belongs to the category of arguments which try to justify the State, the Penal Law, the Judge, and the Gaoler.

    “As there are people, a feeble minority, who will not submit to social customs,” the authoritarians say, “we must maintain magistrates, tribunals and prisons, although these institutions become a source of new evils of all kinds.”

    Therefore we can only repeat what we have so often said concerning authority in general: “To avoid a possible evil you have recourse to means which in themselves are a greater evil, and become the source of those same abuses that you wish to remedy. For do not forget that it is wagedom, the impossibility of living otherwise than by selling your labour, which has created the present Capitalist system, whose vices you begin to recognize.” Let us also remark that this authoritarian way of reasoning is but a justification of what is wrong in the present system. Wagedom was not instituted to remove the disadvantages of Communism; its origin, like that of the State and private ownership, is to be found elsewhere. It is born of slavery and serfdom imposed by force, and only wears a more modern garb. Thus the argument in favour of wagedom is as valueless as those by which they seek to apologize for private property and the State.

  • Fantastic book! For anyone interested, you can read it here.

  • Oh, right. Sorry, easy to confuse the meaning in this particular case 😅

  • I still think that it is important to standarize a canonical Linux core

    If you're not aware, Ubuntu Touch is no longer operated or developed by Canonical, they abandoned the project in 2017. UT was then picked up by UBPorts, a community effort to keep alive what Canonical left behind.

    Personally, I don't have a very high opinion of Canonical due to their use of CLAs, which also appear to be present in some fashion with UT and UBPorts as well:

    I agree that some standardization would likely be beneficial in some areas (such as focusing on a single Phone UI and polishing it up). PostmarketOS is making the most progress on getting real Linux on mobile, so if I had to pick one project to support monetarily, and one that could become mainstream, or partner with a manufacturer like GrapheneOS did with Motorola, I think that would be the project to back, IMHO.

  • It is certainly not usable for the average person in it's current state, hence why I suggest donating to it to help with developing it.

    With proper funding and full-time devs, it would be able to focus on adding proper support to more phones, or potentially partner with a manufacturer like GrapheneOS just did with Motorola to get first-class support on a smaller handful of devices.

    Postmarket is our only long-term mobile option that will remain FLOSS and in the users best interest, we just have to support it and help build it up into something we can all use :)

  • Theoretically, yes. Since everyone would share in both the unpleasant and pleasant work equally (the different jobs would likely be rotated out, to prevent one person permanently doing the really unpleasant work while another person always gets the easy work), it wouldn't really necessitate that they are paid more than someone else on an easier work rotation.

    In exchange for that base essential work being performed, every individual would receive free access to healthcare, education, basic housing, food, electricity, internet, and transportation. The tokens could then be used almost exclusively for luxuries created by other people in their now abundant spare time, or for an usually scarce resource.

    This setup would entirely eliminate poverty, homelessness, hunger, debt, wage slavery, and economic classes.

    However, that's only if we want to retain a market system. An alternative is a gift economy, where there are no tokens at all (which is what The Dispossessed explores, and what was used in some parts of Catalonia during the Spanish Civil War).

    In either case, those unable to perform certain jobs or any work due to disabilities would not suffer any reduction in benefits, and would still receive all of the same benefits/tokens as those who can do more types of work.

  • The issue with Ubuntu Touch is that unfortunately it's not a genuine alternative to Android, as it actually relies on Android quite a lot to function as well as it does.

    It generally uses an outdated Android kernel (which is also usually not receiving security updates) and a Halium abstraction layer to access the closed source binary blob Android drivers for the phone's hardware. It also requires that it be installed on top of an existing Android install, so in all it's more of Linuxified layer on top of Android, which means it's not truly escaping the control of the Android/Google ecosystem.

    PostmarketOS and Mobian are genuinely Mobile focused Linux distros that run the mainline up-to-date Linux kernel, right on the bare metal, meaning they are not subject to any influence from Google.

    Both projects often collaborate and benefit from each other, they just use a different base distro (Alpine for PostmarketOS, Debian for Mobian), but that doesn't result in any wasted effort, as ultimately any new developments, drivers, or new phone support are mainlined into the kernel itself, so both projects benefit.

    They're not as usable as Ubuntu Touch is right now, but they are ultimately the better solutions long-term to ensure that all the code is under community control so we aren't reliant on outdated unsecure Android components.

  • Hm, the article I linked to about the foodbank system wasn't ideal, here's a better one (replaced the old one in my previous comment with it too).

    The difference between pur current system and the foodbank system is every foodbank bidding for the limited resources are all given an equal amount of fake money before every bidding session without having to do anything for that fake money.

    You could entirely eliminate wage labour if this system was adopted country wide. If profit motive was removed, all the bullshit jobs would no longer be done, leaving us with just the essential work to keep society running, like food production, housing creation/maintenance, medicine, utilities, etc.

    If we then collectively spread the load of those essential things, especially combined with automating as much as we can, each person would only need to work roughly 2 to 3 months out of the year, with the rest being totally free time they could do anything with.

    To see an extremely fleshed out version of how a moneyless society could look like in practice, I highly recommend reading Ursula LeGuin's The Dispossessed.

  • For anyone reading this, please consider donating to PostmarketOS or Mobian if you have the means, as it will help us escape the Android ecosystem which is getting more and more anti-user due to google controlling it.

  • If you, the reader of this comment, are not currently in a union, please contact a union today by sending them an email about organizing your workplace. Doing so is literally essential to our last chance to avoid entering a bloody civil war.

    The country would be brought to its knees if suddenly deprived of profit and labor, allowing us to directly demand real changes (Ending the war in Iran and Gaza, and Abolishing ICE should be towards the top of the list).

    The General Strike was extremely effective in Chile in 2019, and had they not fallen for the trick of liberal reform, they would've had a successful revolution on their hands with virtually no bloodshed.

    There are some concrete steps all of us can take toward enacting that hard-core general strike to make it more viable and bearable for us all. (the titles below expand if you click them).

    Violence is being used against those who resist and it will only continue. It extremely important to have the skills to be able to keep yourself and others alive if they get hurt.

    Tacticool Girlfriend provides a great introduction to building a personal first aid kit, called an IFAK, which can deal with things like bullet wounds and other serious bleeding wounds. I also want to emphasize her recommendation of only buying medical gear from reputable sources (not Amazon!), such as North American Rescue to avoid fakes that could cost you your life.

    But you'll need to learn how to use that equipment, too. The best resource for that is to take a local Stop The Bleed class, which are pretty widely available in most places. They may cost a small fee, but can also sometimes be free. Alternatively, if you cannot access a local class, this video by PrepMedic will give you a solid understanding of how to use Tourniquets and Gauze for wound packing.

    Injuries are less harmful if they are tended to early. Learning first aid can help conserve resources when healthcare becomes unaffordable. Having several medics in case of harm by police is an extremely powerful morale booster during a protest that may become a police riot. When you become comfortable with the basics of first aid, riot medicine is the next suggested step.

    If you haven't already, get to know your neighbors. Mutual aid is a willingness to support and grow your community. This can include informal networks through friends, tenant/renter organizations, solidarity groups, and industrial unions.

    These are groups using direct action to solve each other's problems. Building strong communities makes it difficult for fascism to take root. The actions of the government are going to hit every community hard, and the ones who build trust in each other and work together are most likely to survive. We've been building a list of resources in !inperson@slrpnk.net to help you on your way. Also check out this handy guide to find existing groups in your area.

    This isn't only for your own community protection. Your ability to organize today will change the political landscape tomorrow. When revolution occurs, the social organizations that show the greatest resilience through the regime are the ones typically calling the shots when the dust settles. When it comes to elections, get out the vote drives are useless if most of the voters are fascists. At some point, you have to do grassroots political education if you don't want fascist candidates winning elections. Mutual aid networks are excellent forums not only for teaching each other good political ideas, but demonstrating them in practice.

    If you aren't in a union (or even if you are, it's worth dual-carding), consider joining the IWW to unionize your workplace (bonus: you'll get higher wages, better benefits, and more time off if you succeed!) to make a general strike possible.

    Once you are in a union you and your coworkers will need to pressure your leadership to prepare for a general strike, as well as pressure them to organize with other unions to enact a general strike. This is especially true if you are in a more traditional union that isn't the IWW. Your local shop may need to organize directly with other unions if your union leaders are too cowardly to do so.

    Most unions have a strike fund that can supplement your income during a general strike to make it more financially bearable (you should also save as much money as you can reasonably do, so it can also be used to keep yourself afloat during a strike). A General Strike is officially planned by the UAW for May 1st 2028, but it was planned before Trump was elected, and by then will be too late, so prepare now for one that may start sooner.

    You can contact the IWW with the link below:

    And for our international friends, you should join one as well, as fascism is gaining momentum globally. If your country isn't listed below, just contact the IWW directly in the link above, and they'll help you set up a new local branch.

    • 🇦🇷 Argentina: FORA
    • 🇦🇺 Australia: ASF-IWA
    • 🇧🇷 Brazil: FOB
    • 🇧🇬 Bulgaria: ARS, CITUB
    • 🇩🇪 Germany: FAU
    • 🇬🇷 Greece: ESE
    • 🇮🇹 Italy: USI
    • 🇮🇪 Ireland: IWW Ireland
    • 🇳🇱 🇧🇪 Netherlands & Belgium: Vriji Bond
    • 🇪🇸 Spain: CNT
    • 🇸🇪 Sweden: SAC
    • 🇬🇧 United Kingdom: UVW

    Sometimes benign seeming efforts can turn into unexpected personal data collecting traps. Like an obscure website for exchanging contact info with other students turning into a global ad-tech surveillance network (Facebook), or innocent seeming online personality tests being use to harvest character profiles. Even Etsy, Reddit, Tinder, and Duolingo are feeding information to US Government Agencies like ICE.

    Security culture is commonly used to describe the general awareness of such potential traps and how it can affect groups or entire communities. This goes beyond mere individual privacy efforts, as without joint efforts these often fail to work.

    Especially in activist circles, security culture is paramount. For opsec reasons not everyone in the group might be aware of what clandestine efforts others are involved in, but with a general security culture many potential data leaks can be avoided.

    Movements are made by the volume of their participants, and the easier and less dangerous it is to participate, the more people will get involved. As more people get involved, individual involvement becomes even less dangerous, creating a virtuous cycle.

    We'll start it off with some General Advice:

    • Mentally wall off personal uniquely identifying info from your online presence, actively build a habit of opsec so that withholding information is your default mental state
    • Be careful about who you meet online
    • Use different, unrelated usernames, passwords & emails for every account. And try not to connect to those accounts with your real IP address (use Tor or a VPN)
    • Be mindful that anything done online leaves a trail
    • agents provocateurs may seek to find patsies willing to perform an ill-advised illegal activity in order to legitimize police repression. If someone is trying to pressure you, especially if you don't have a long and proven history with them, be extremely wary.

    For a full guide on what encrypted communications platforms to use, and how to stay off the radar, read the Digital Camouflage section within the Monthly Meta post here (you'll need to scroll down. I'd add it here, but it won't fit in this comment).

    I'd also highly recommend Full Spectrum Resistance to anyone who wants further info on how to resist (audiobook version here).

  • I'm not a believer myself, but theoretically, what if this was simply the best God could do? Not an all powerful being, but a flawed one that couldn't foresee the consequences their actions, or of the systems they created?

  • You could replace markets with a Cybersyn-like system combined perhaps with how food banks bid with fake money to determine how resources are distributed amongst them.

  • If you'd like to see a moneyless world explored extremely well, I highly recommend reading The Dispossessed by Ursula LeGuin.

    It's an incredible work of classic sci-fi that very realistically depicts how society would function without any money, and honestly I think the way it's shown could absolutely work.

  • Impossible meat is pretty incredible IMO. I was able to convert my entire family, who were meat eaters their entire lives, off of beef thanks to how excellent impossible meat is in all of our favorite beef dishes.

    I think it's very useful to help wean people off of real meat, who may have many traditional family recipes that they may miss quite a lot, where veggies can't quite replicate the taste.

    I've also found Meati brand mushroom based steaks to be super good, and extremely close to a real steak.

    And Jack & Annie's makes an awesome jackfruit based sliced steak substitute that's incredible for cheese steak sub rolls. None of those specific brands are particularly unhealthy either.

  • I get the feeling I'm having a massive brain fart moment, but... what is the resolutions feed? 😅 (the fuck_ai community?)

    I think a community like that could work, but it may require very active moderation to remain a chill environment. As @thinkercharmercoderfarmer@slrpnk.net mentioned, it could potentially attract a lot of AI proponents, and with that, angry slap fights may be a somewhat common occurrence.

    But I do like the goal you're going for of trying to lower the temperature and encourage more productive discussions. Perhaps it could also have a focus on how to combat AI as well, such as through different data poisoning methods, or effective means for a community to resist a data center being constructed near them?

    If it's something you wanna do, go for it! ^^

  • A general strike needs to be organized and initiated by unions. Unions have strike funds that pay out money to members on strike to help them afford not getting paychecks during the strike, that's why unions are so important, as without them, your options for non-violent resistance are more limited.

    If you, the reader of this comment, are not currently in a union, please contact a union today by sending them an email about organizing your workplace. Doing so is literally essential to our last chance to avoid entering a bloody civil war.

    The country would be brought to its knees if suddenly deprived of profit and labor, allowing us to directly demand real changes (Ending the war in Iran and Gaza, and Abolishing ICE should be towards the top of the list).

    The General Strike was extremely effective in Chile in 2019, and had they not fallen for the trick of liberal reform, they would've had a successful revolution on their hands with virtually no bloodshed.

    There are some concrete steps all of us can take toward enacting that hard-core general strike to make it more viable and bearable for us all. (the titles below expand if you click them).

    Violence is being used against those who resist and it will only continue. It extremely important to have the skills to be able to keep yourself and others alive if they get hurt.

    Tacticool Girlfriend provides a great introduction to building a personal first aid kit, called an IFAK, which can deal with things like bullet wounds and other serious bleeding wounds. I also want to emphasize her recommendation of only buying medical gear from reputable sources (not Amazon!), such as North American Rescue to avoid fakes that could cost you your life.

    But you'll need to learn how to use that equipment, too. The best resource for that is to take a local Stop The Bleed class, which are pretty widely available in most places. They may cost a small fee, but can also sometimes be free. Alternatively, if you cannot access a local class, this video by PrepMedic will give you a solid understanding of how to use Tourniquets and Gauze for wound packing.

    Injuries are less harmful if they are tended to early. Learning first aid can help conserve resources when healthcare becomes unaffordable. Having several medics in case of harm by police is an extremely powerful morale booster during a protest that may become a police riot. When you become comfortable with the basics of first aid, riot medicine is the next suggested step.

    If you haven't already, get to know your neighbors. Mutual aid is a willingness to support and grow your community. This can include informal networks through friends, tenant/renter organizations, solidarity groups, and industrial unions.

    These are groups using direct action to solve each other's problems. Building strong communities makes it difficult for fascism to take root. The actions of the government are going to hit every community hard, and the ones who build trust in each other and work together are most likely to survive. We've been building a list of resources in !inperson@slrpnk.net to help you on your way. Also check out this handy guide to find existing groups in your area.

    This isn't only for your own community protection. Your ability to organize today will change the political landscape tomorrow. When revolution occurs, the social organizations that show the greatest resilience through the regime are the ones typically calling the shots when the dust settles. When it comes to elections, get out the vote drives are useless if most of the voters are fascists. At some point, you have to do grassroots political education if you don't want fascist candidates winning elections. Mutual aid networks are excellent forums not only for teaching each other good political ideas, but demonstrating them in practice.

    If you aren't in a union (or even if you are, it's worth dual-carding), consider joining the IWW to unionize your workplace (bonus: you'll get higher wages, better benefits, and more time off if you succeed!) to make a general strike possible.

    Once you are in a union you and your coworkers will need to pressure your leadership to prepare for a general strike, as well as pressure them to organize with other unions to enact a general strike. This is especially true if you are in a more traditional union that isn't the IWW. Your local shop may need to organize directly with other unions if your union leaders are too cowardly to do so.

    Most unions have a strike fund that can supplement your income during a general strike to make it more financially bearable (you should also save as much money as you can reasonably do, so it can also be used to keep yourself afloat during a strike). A General Strike is officially planned by the UAW for May 1st 2028, but it was planned before Trump was elected, and by then will be too late, so prepare now for one that may start sooner.

    You can contact the IWW with the link below:

    And for our international friends, you should join one as well, as fascism is gaining momentum globally. If your country isn't listed below, just contact the IWW directly in the link above, and they'll help you set up a new local branch.

    • 🇦🇷 Argentina: FORA
    • 🇦🇺 Australia: ASF-IWA
    • 🇧🇷 Brazil: FOB
    • 🇧🇬 Bulgaria: ARS, CITUB
    • 🇩🇪 Germany: FAU
    • 🇬🇷 Greece: ESE
    • 🇮🇹 Italy: USI
    • 🇮🇪 Ireland: IWW Ireland
    • 🇳🇱 🇧🇪 Netherlands & Belgium: Vriji Bond
    • 🇪🇸 Spain: CNT
    • 🇸🇪 Sweden: SAC
    • 🇬🇧 United Kingdom: UVW

    Sometimes benign seeming efforts can turn into unexpected personal data collecting traps. Like an obscure website for exchanging contact info with other students turning into a global ad-tech surveillance network (Facebook), or innocent seeming online personality tests being use to harvest character profiles. Even Etsy, Reddit, Tinder, and Duolingo are feeding information to US Government Agencies like ICE.

    Security culture is commonly used to describe the general awareness of such potential traps and how it can affect groups or entire communities. This goes beyond mere individual privacy efforts, as without joint efforts these often fail to work.

    Especially in activist circles, security culture is paramount. For opsec reasons not everyone in the group might be aware of what clandestine efforts others are involved in, but with a general security culture many potential data leaks can be avoided.

    Movements are made by the volume of their participants, and the easier and less dangerous it is to participate, the more people will get involved. As more people get involved, individual involvement becomes even less dangerous, creating a virtuous cycle.

    We'll start it off with some General Advice:

    • Mentally wall off personal uniquely identifying info from your online presence, actively build a habit of opsec so that withholding information is your default mental state
    • Be careful about who you meet online
    • Use different, unrelated usernames, passwords & emails for every account. And try not to connect to those accounts with your real IP address (use Tor or a VPN)
    • Be mindful that anything done online leaves a trail
    • agents provocateurs may seek to find patsies willing to perform an ill-advised illegal activity in order to legitimize police repression. If someone is trying to pressure you, especially if you don't have a long and proven history with them, be extremely wary.

    For a full guide on what encrypted communications platforms to use, and how to stay off the radar, read the Digital Camouflage section within the Monthly Meta post here (you'll need to scroll down. I'd add it here, but it won't fit in this comment).

    I'd also highly recommend Full Spectrum Resistance to anyone who wants further info on how to resist (audiobook version here).

  • Ah, so you are! My mistake :p

    until they work on the UI toolkit to allow a different approach (like e.g. Firefox does allow)

    Like how Firefox lets you drag and drop icons and spacers around? That would be cool to have in Libreoffice.

    Apple’s UI is good not because it’s ‘bare-bones’, but because it organises elements visually instead of piling them all into a giant toolbar for the user to wade through.

    Could definitely see that as a big improvement, even as someone quite used to the Windows 95 way of doing things (or at least, I prefer the old way to the ribbon), hopefully someone who has a similar itch to us as well as the capabilities to implement it does so someday :)

  • Ah, I assumed you were comparing it to MS Office as the gold standard, and chose the tabbed mode to make it closest to that, though I don't personally use it that way myself.

    LibreOffice has a simpler mode, though not quite as bare-bones as your Apple example. It's how I how use it personally:

    There's also a Sidebar mode, which can collapse out of the way when not in use, or be brought back by pressing a small button on the side of the program.

    I agree it could stand to offer a mode with much more spacing and just the essential options, but I think for the most part, the simpler toolbar mode which I use is pretty adequate, and doesn't feel overwhelming to use.

    Alternatively, Libreoffice is quite customizable, so a user can remove every option from the toolbar they never use, and make it appear nicer and less cramped.

  • "Every machine has had the same history — a long record of sleepless nights and of poverty, of disillusions and of joys, of partial improvements discovered by several generations of nameless workers, who have added to the original invention these little nothings, without which the most fertile idea would remain fruitless. More than that: every new invention is a synthesis, the resultant of innumerable inventions which have preceded it in the vast field of mechanics and industry.

    Science and industry, knowledge and application, discovery and practical realization leading to new discoveries, cunning of brain and of hand, toil of mind and muscle — all work together. Each discovery, each advance, each increase in the sum of human riches, owes its being to the physical and mental travail of the past and the present.

    By what right then can any one whatever appropriate the least morsel of this immense whole and say — This is mine, not yours?"

    -Peter Kropotkin, The Conquest of Bread

  • Is there an office suite you had in mind that looks futuristic? Comparing a slightly old version of LibreOffice with a modern version of MS Office... They look pretty similar to me? (The gray document background in libreoffice is from me, it defaults to something closer to MS office).

    Also @bestboyfriendintheworld@sh.itjust.works

  • MS-DOS gaming @retrolemmy.com

    PSA: You can use your motherboard's HD Audio for DOS games in Windows 98/ME now thanks to WDMHDA, an HD Audio driver for Windows 98SE / ME

    github.com /andrew-hoffman/WDMHDA
  • retrocomputing @lemmy.sdf.org

    PSA: You can use your motherboard's HD Audio for DOS games in Windows 98/ME now thanks to WDMHDA, an HD Audio driver for Windows 98SE / ME

    github.com /andrew-hoffman/WDMHDA
  • MealtimeVideos Cafe @lemmy.cafe

    The Nintendo Wii U - GameSack

  • Gaming @beehaw.org

    The Nintendo Wii U - GameSack

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    I Spent a Year Replacing My Subscriptions by Self Hosting. Here’s How.

  • retroNET - Vintage Culture/Websites/Software @lemmy.sdf.org

    Before curl: The IRC Bot That Started It All

  • Solarpunk Farming @slrpnk.net

    Canada's First Fully Automated Greenhouse

  • Solarpunk technology @slrpnk.net

    Fruit picking robots and drones, similar to the fruit picking machine in the Solarpunk chobani commercial, now exist

  • MealtimeVideos Cafe @lemmy.cafe

    Quirky video about engine sounds, electric car sounds, indicator sounds and game sounds | Posy

  • Videos @sopuli.xyz

    Random Stuff - Garden Stuff, Parsnips, Cider, Tinkering, Non-Unpizza, Pennywort, Comment Positivity - AtomicShrimp

  • MS-DOS gaming @retrolemmy.com

    Why switch to Linux when you can use DOS? (exploring FreeDOS and making a simple game in assembly)

  • Cyberdecks @programming.dev

    BANDIT a 32bit baremetal computer that runs Color Forth

  • Solarpunk Travel🚲🚆⛵ @slrpnk.net

    I fixed the biggest problem with electric bikes: being able to charge them with car EV chargers

  • Anarchism @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    Why I left Anarchism, and then came back

  • MealtimeVideos Cafe @lemmy.cafe

    How Your Parents Ruined Driving | Climate Town

  • XMPP @slrpnk.net

    The Movim dev is making steady progress on the Discord-like spaces feature ^^

    piaille.fr /@movim/116127466724198784
  • Forgotten Weapons @lemmy.world

    1845 Allen & Thurber "Pepperbox" - Goldrush Era CCW

  • Liberal Gun Owners @lemmy.world

    ICE, Minneapolis, and the right to carry | The Gray Area

  • MealtimeVideos Cafe @lemmy.cafe

    Uncovering The Most Infamous Secret Society: The Bohemian Grove | More Perfect Union

  • Stop Killing Games @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    StopKillingGames did a Press Conference in Brussels featuring Ross Scott, Josh Strife, and Members of EU Parliament