99% of questions about libsoc theory were asked and answered 100 years ago in that one book alone haha
So many interests, so little time and money. Always interested in talking to more like-minded people!
Where you can find me on the internet: nathanupchurch.com/me
Keyoxide: https://keyoxide.org/31E809FAEA1532AC91BBDCF1EC499D3513F69340
99% of questions about libsoc theory were asked and answered 100 years ago in that one book alone haha
I’d start with Kropotkin’s “The Conquest of Bread” followed by Gelderloos’ “Anarchy Works.” Kropotkin explains the theory behind why libertarian socialism / anarchist communism is a better, more fair way to structure society, while exhaustively addressing common objections. Gelderloos writes from a modern perspective while offering examples of non-hierarchal human organization throughout history. For those who (somehow) read these and remain convinced that the idea is utopian, I’d recommend Kropotkin’s essay “Are We Good Enough,” and his principal scientific work: “Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution” which offers a compelling counter-argument to the ‘dog eat dog’ conclusion drawn by many from Darwin’s theory of evolution by positing that cooperation is sustained in humans and animals over time through natural selection.
For a quick and dirty intro to the basic idea of what classical anarchism is: “An Anarchist Program” - Errico Malatesta.
Anarchism is a line of political thought that goes back for well over a century, with many branches and differing opinions; like any group, libertarian socialists are not a monolith. Anarchism, including anarchist communism, is a response not only to capitalism, but to other branches of leftist thought: while communist revolutions were taking place around the world, anarchists were there alongside them, critiquing the practices that continue to be critiqued today concerning communist projects with their focus on challenging power and unnecessary hierarchy: who has power over who, why, and is it strictly necessary? As someone once said: “Freedom without equality is the jungle. Equality without freedom is prison. I want neither the jungle nor prison.” That is what classical anarchist thought brings to the table: it examines how society can be structured while providing both freedom and equality in a way that neither capitalist thinking nor other leftist schools of thought adequately address.
So you aren’t at all interested in understanding my positions, got it. Have a good day.
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are you also against private grocery stores?
I am, yes.
I have zero interest in spending this beautiful Friday morning arguing, so I’m not going to, but if you would like some reading recommendations to understand my political positions on these sorts of things, let me know and I’d be happy to provide them.
I’m making a joke in poor taste to express my disdain for people who commodify human necessities for profit.
You’re moving the goalposts now; we were talking about an OS, not console vs PC hardware.
I remember that feeling. And using a beginner friendly distro like Mint is a mixed bag, because while the simple stuff is easier, more complex things can be a bit more difficult than they might be on a system designed to be flexible, like Endeavour or Arch; it’s a compromise either way.
You nay have already done some of these, but the things that gave me the confidence to switch were:
ls
, cd
, pwd
, cp
, mv
, cat
, touch
, and grep
- even if you don’t need to use the terminal on whatever OS you’re on, this will give you confidence.~/.config
and realizing that system config is all text files helped me feel empowered to fix issues that may arise.At the end of the day I was still fairly petrified, but I found the experience much smoother than I had dared to hope. I think the deciding factor was that I used to really enjoy my computer way back in the Windows XP days through to Windows 7, but that joy had long since gone until I found it again with Linux. When using my computer began to feel like drudgery, I didn’t really have a choice but to switch.
Also, a hugely overlooked part of choosing a distro is the community around it. If your distro has good people filling its forums, you’ll never need to worry about getting something working when you need to.
I play on a proper PC, not a steam deck. Of course there are going to be performance compromises on a portable device with an APU; that’s got nothing to do with the OS.
I exclusively run Linux and I play modern games all the time without issues. You just click “install” on Steam and it works 99.9% of the time; I dont even look up the game to check if it works anymore. Also, have a look at some comparisons on YouTube — some games actually run faster on Linux because there’s less bloat in the OS.
I don’t want to have to go through a lot of settings to find a way to make the game run properly
Those days are mostly gone
What are you frightened of?
All good info, but OP should not be running Endeavour if they are trying to mess around in /usr/ to install java - they’re going to bork their install in a matter of minutes without constant supervision. Mint, PopOS, Fedora Kinoite, Elementary… whatever, but not an Arch based distro.
Seconding Mint, or a beginner distro that supports KDE Plasma for a more feature complete experience
Agreed: Endeavour is not for beginners.
I would try searching “kio” in your package manager.
What distro are you on? Some don’t install all available KIO workers and you’ll have to install them yourself.
Is this something that is likely to improve going forward?
Like any FLOSS project, things tend to happen when programmers decide to solve a problem for themselves. If you don’t the the skills to do this, you could always bring it up on the KDE forum under the “brainstorming” category, submit a feature request on the KDE bug tracker, or sponsor a developer to perform the work.
I vote Kate
I use RSS Guard