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It's easy to preach 'agorism' and 'not paying taxes' when you're sitting behind a keyboard in a place where the rule of law actually exists to protect your dissent.
When you live in a place where the state can physically disconnect you from the world, freeze your local bank account at the press of a button, and has a monopoly on violence, 'stop voting' isn't a strategy—it's the default reality.
Decentralization isn't a lifestyle choice for us; it’s a necessity for survival. We use these tools precisely because we are forced to live under that authority, not because we 'believe' in it. Talking down to people who are actually facing the consequences of centralized power doesn't make you more decentralized; it just makes you out of touch with how the world works outside your bubble
where the rule of law actually exists to protect your dissent.
What is "rule of law" ? Obeying the state rules but crying online about how the state cut your internet?
What is the law in the end ?
A piece of paper where it says I should obey it? Is it a contract ? Where did I sign that contract?
We can debate the 'Social Contract' all day, but that doesn't fix the infrastructure. While you're busy with semantics, we're focused on building workarounds for a digital siege. I'm interested in P2P resilience, not philosophy. Unless you have a technical solution for offline connectivity, I’m moving on
Let me know when that online P2P resilience gives you food.
Meanwhile go on, be a statist bootlicker that only complain.
Is silly to think that you can achieve that meanwhile you are still supporting the state...
Stop voting, stop believing in gov "authority", stop paying taxes and then we can talk about "decentralization"...
Decentralization start when you stop being a statist cuck.