Skip to main content


"We see something happen once, twice, three times, and suddenly we stop questioning it. We start believing it’s the natural order. We mistake habit for destiny. We accept that this is just how the world works.
But history isn’t a loop. It’s a series of choices.
Climate collapse? Not inevitable. Oligarchy? Not inevitable. War? Not inevitable. These things don’t happen because they must. They happen because people in power convince themselves (and us) that they must. And when we believe them, when we accept the pattern, we let it play out.
The only way to stop a pattern is to name it, challenge it, refuse to follow the script. The only way to change the future is to stop assuming it’s already written.
Because the past doesn’t dictate the future. Unless we let it."
joanwestenberg.com/pattern-rec…

Sanne Bjerg reshared this.


Vandværk


Hvordan kan et vandværk være privatejet? Et energiselskab? Kommunikation? "One of the fundamental 'reforms' pursued by neoliberalism was to privatize these public services (or at least as many as capitalism's servants in government could get away with) transferring collective resources into exclusive ownership. We can still use them, but now, on top of the payment that the state or the customer makes for the actual service provided (water, or sanitation, or thansport, or hospitals, or housing), we have to pay - either individually or as taxpayers - an extra fee to those whose exclusive property the service has become This fee is what we mean by rent. (...) Almost inevitably, privatisation leads to a decline in both access to, and the quality of, public services. There is no mystery about why this should be: the owner's incentive is to extract as much money from the service as possible." (G. Monbiot and P. Hutchison: The Invisible Doctrine)

Sanne Bjerg reshared this.





I'm with Joan Westenberg ;-)


"Not in the nostalgic, “things were better in my day" way.
More in the "I refuse to be gaslit by modernity" way. I refuse to pretend that constant connectivity has made us happier. I refuse to buy into the idea that infinite scrolling is anything but digital debt—time spent, nothing gained.

I love technology. I love the Internet. But I hate what's been done to it.

I hate that everything is optimized for engagement instead of meaning. I hate that we treat labor exploitation as a feature, not a bug. I hate that the same billionaires who gutted local journalism now act like slop is the answer. I hate that we've spent two decades building digital spaces only to end up with walled gardens owned by the same five companies, keeping us pacified and consuming."

You hit a certain point, and you stop playing along.joanwestenberg.com/im-entering…


Sanne Bjerg reshared this.


joanwestenberg.com/big-tech-wa…

reshared this


Sanne Bjerg reshared this.


Important background understanding : america2.news/how-to-understan…

Sanne Bjerg reshared this.