Avatar of Dinh AaronMk

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1 yr ago
Current As an American [user could not afford rest of post]
6 likes
3 yrs ago
Never spaghetti; Boston strong
3 yrs ago
The last post below me is a lie
1 like
3 yrs ago
THE SACRIFICE IS COMPLETE. THE BOILERMEN HAVE FRESH SOULS. THEY CAN DO SHIFT CHANGES.
2 likes
3 yrs ago
Was that supposed to be an anime reference

Bio

Harry Potter is not a world view, read another book or I will piss on the moon with my super laser piss.

Most Recent Posts

Name: Edward Mayer

Age: 28

Ethnicity: German-American

Occupation/Place in the Combination: Outside, Labor Agitator/Anarchist

Personal History: Born on the passage over from Germany, Edward Mayer was the first of five children born to a young German couple fleeing Europe in 1849. Fleeing the continent towards the end of the March Revolution. Being liberals and socialists, they feared for their safety and that of the then pregnant Claire Mayer, Edward's mother when the governments of Germany eventually cracked down. Edward's father, a doctor named Amadeus was confident that when they landed in New York that he may begin a practice and carve out a living in the new land.

However, landing in New York Amadeus had no such luck and as the mixture of fortune and misfortune would have it, the family chose to move west to the promising Central City west of the Mississippi river. At the age of five, Edward was moved with his family from the East Coast to the American interior. Not going straight into Central City though, the family put down roots in a small farmstead forty-miles outside Central City where off and on Amadeus practiced as a country doctor while trying to tend to a small farm.

The family began their move proper into Central City after the American Civil War, in part taking advantage of the growing city offering up more advantages as it swelled with immigrants moving west and freed blacks moving north. Amadeus too had managed to save up from his practice, and moving the family into Downtown set up a practice between the Irish and German neighborhoods where they also lived.

Edward for his part was mostly homeschooled before moving into the city. Largely educated in German from the few odd books the family managed to bring over from Germany and acquired in New York, the young Edward spoke with a soft if noticeable accent compared to children of his own age. Edward only really coming to learn English through attending church. Yet despite the language handicap he had in his early years, he was a bright kid and read voraciously and studied under his father on occasion.

His favorite subjects when he became a teenager turned from learning to emulate his father as a doctor to politics and philosophy and he discovered and read Proudhon, Marx, and Engels in particular.

At the age of nineteen Edward seemed to openly forsake his otherwise middle-class upbringing and left for the east side of town, for close to six years he bounced between jobs at the factories and stockyards exploring the capitalist-industrialist framework of what he realized was the future to come. The conditions of the working man in the factories and the conditions they suffered at the expense of the factory boss's whims greatly effected him as he went in with the ideas of Proudhon and Marx in his head.

Though while he came to see and understand the disaffection of the American worker, he later came to discover the underground labor movement in Central City and that his thoughts were exactly his alone and that there were others who believed at least similar to him; if not just like him.
I'm not deviating, I'm driving my point home. If the technologies I'm describing became ubiquitous, humanity could literally sit back and fuck off all day,


So I think I see what you're trying to say. And what that says to me is that at this point humanity should just fuck off and die from what you're saying, because we'll become individually pointless to each other.
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>mfw commies don't realize concrete using Bacillus bacteria has existed for almost a decade, that line-x has existed for decades, and that self-healing asphalt can last for decades



>mfw the kid on the internet can't even post legitemate sources on what he's talking about and just posts YouTube videos of scientists talking about it as if it's still in the theoretical developmental phase and some aussies chunking shit from a tower

It's like you don't even know how to cite actual articles. Besides, some fancy materials isn't going to solve anything or absolve the fact those new buildings you want to build or retro-fit are still going to cost millions and that the present means of overcoming muh world hunger is within hands but probably won't happen because the borgies get in the way.

Really what you're saying is stuff corporate officials in engineering firms what to have said because it gives them more money because they land contracts to build the elaborate mechanisms by which simple problems can be fixed.

But really you're deviating from the point at hand. The matter isn't scientific engineering, which seems to be the entire point you're making now. It's about the organization of a society. So frankly, you're moving the goal posts.
Not going to look it up I can tell you you're right.
Theoretical technology vs truck liner.

Let's stick to current solutions.
What is it with this place and communism?


<post>


>X-shit
>Regenerative hardened rock shit
>Says things that agree with my statement in a manner that seems proposed to disagree



fam at this point you declare your love for Stalin and I get to murder you when we remove the borgies.

That or you honestly don't know what you're talking about and your making shit up on the fly just to try and prove us wrong, thus engaging in cyclical action.

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Well, then you should probably draft some legislation that: 1) forces these companies to package the "imperfect" food, and 2) hires government employees to collect and transport them to those that are starving. I'm sure that'd do a lot of good, and bring food prices down both locally and internationally.


Fam, you don't think that's what people are not trying to do? There are entire ads about reclaimed food.


"Follow the journey of a strawberry from the farm to the refrigerator to understand all that it takes to bring your food to you. Did you know that 40% of our food ends up wasted? Wasted food is the single largest contributor to landfills in the US—not to mention that it wastes water, labor, fuel, money, & love!"



It's a lot fucking easier than building or remodeling a multi-million dollar structure with a suffocating energy demand in order to grow some beats.

<Snipped quote by Dinh AaronMk>
What? Their use of government subsidies resulted in an economic bubble burst, which should've been obvious. Their farming practices eroded the local topsoil, which led to the Dust Bowl. Their lack of distilling biofuel from the surplus wheat led to their loss of property, which was their fault.

I'm not saying they should've been left to die, but they were pretty stupid.


I don't think you quite get the economic conditions of the early 20th century. Not only was grain and corn based fuel not a part of the public conscious let-alone not even a science yet, but so much oil was being pulled up from Texas at the time that gasoline was dirt cheap. A gallon of gas was ten-cents, adding more fuel to the fuel market would have crashed it even more and they'd still have lost their farms.

And further: you're missing the point. Capitalism always crashed after growth and everyone forgets that. They did, Hoover did, Woodrow Wilson did. Of course you can say that now because that's only in retrospect but it doesn't make you anymore intelligent than they were.

And it was hardly the farmer's fault alone either. There was a whole problem with eastern suitcase farmers coming into Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas to play acres of wheat and then leaving until harvest time when they'd scope it all up, sell it, and leave the fields barren and naked, unlike the local farmers who would have made efforts to take care of the land they lived on, because it was the land that kept them alive. Like the corporate bankers, the suitcase farmers only cared for a quick buck.

And even before the Dust Bowl in the late 19th century the wills of east coast capitalism were driving for the development of land that really should have stayed unused, or for beef production (or if they just used bison, but wait; they killed all the bison to kill all the indians!). They sold cheap acreage to immigrants from Europe who willingly settled the land because they got the American dream sold to them.

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Bro, I'm not killing anyone. That's bad, and you should feel bad.


I'm coming for that tooth brush because you missed the point again.
<Snipped quote by Dinh AaronMk>
I don't believe centralized authority is necessary, or that organizationally flat and non-democratic instititions are incapable of doing good. I'm not proposing that groups or people should hold absolute authority of the means and ways of production. I'm of the belief that distributed integration of the symbiotic variety is a more resilient strategy.


thenation.com/article/worker-cooperati..

Kill the bosses.
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