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- Hi, friends at Libreplanet.
- During a discussion in #fsf, we were quite critical of modern society,
- especially on copyright, patents, "intellectual property", healthcare
- and Capitalism. A (possibly sarcastic of modern society) suggestion
- was raised to build islands in the middle of oceans from plastic waste
- and run a free society there. This is obviously infeasible, but it
- reinforced my thoughts that free software isn't enough. With people
- constantly in poverty, healthcare being so expensive in countries such
- as the United States, companies and individuals focusing on profit
- rather than genuine good for society, etc., free software is a step to
- bring us closer to good-old freedom, but with a society that hasn't
- woken up from the endless advertising (brainwashing) of cooprporations
- and governments, we'll almost inevitably be forced to use nonfree
- software, and have our right to freedom violated in countless other
- ways.
- I thought: Why aren't we doing a great job convincing users to switch to
- free software as a replacement to the proprietary software they use?
- Some classmates that I tried convincing into using Trisquel GNU/Linux
- noted that most modern programs that they use day-to-day only run on
- Android, Apple iOS, Apple macOS and Microsoft Windows, and these
- themselves are nonfree software that they can't escape using (For
- example, school here in China requires the use of WeChat and Tencent
- Meetings to have online classes, and does not have a way to let me
- dial-in by phone, despite my efforts explaining the Constitution and my
- rights to deny a contract I disagree with. [1] They even went as far as
- saying "We don't care what the Constitution says, you play by our
- rules", which was a surprise to me.). I reconsidered the situation,
- explained to them what freedom is in this context, and linked them to a
- comprimise, Deepin Linux, a (GNU/)Linux distribution targeted at new
- Chinese users who need WeChat, Tencent Meetings and all that in the
- application center. This was a comprimise, but this is the best I could
- do given their situation. Personally I use virtual machines that
- reset to snapshots every boot to run these programs, sometimes even run
- a GNU/Linux distribution inside the virtual machine and use Wine from
- there. They aren't technically skilled and couldn't handle this.
- Some sources state that US courts require the use of Zoom, which is
- frustrating to think about.
- I asked myself: Why do people choose convenience over freedom? This is
- still a mystery to me, as this one of the problems in the to-solve list
- of the upcoming project. I have a theory that it's a combination of
- social pressure and coorporate brainwashing, as companies are taking
- advantage of human psycology, creating an information cocoon of
- "convenience is the most important thing in your life", pushing products
- to users with social engineering in order to profit from sales or the
- information of their users. They do everything for profit; they even
- sign contracts with schools to push their products to students, often
- with the students unable to reject. In this case, how the school and
- government handles this situation is a good example of short-term
- thinking (Or, it might be not caring about their students, I hope it's
- the first, but my conversation with school makes me afraid it's the
- latter.)
- My family has been to the US in 2013. One of my biggest negative
- impressions was that health care was terrifyingly expensive. A simple
- X-ray, a two dollar checkup in most hospitals in Shanghai, China costs
- hundreds of dollars in the US (I do not remember which state or region
- it was, I was just 5 years old then. What I do remember is that we had
- some kind of medicaid; even then, the prices are in hundreds). A
- standard CT scan, around 20--35 dollars in Shanghai, costs hundreds or
- even thousands of dollars. A ride in the ambulance costs 10 dollars on
- average in Shanghai, but thousands in ths US. (Note that by "the US", I
- am referring to the state I was in, I do hope that there are saner ones.)
- Apparantly this is caused by the US not having a good system of
- medicaid, which I hope gets better implemented with Obamacare, but that
- seems to be just a wish. This leads me to the point that governments
- are responsible for their citizens in exchange for the citizens giving
- up certain liberties (note that liberty isn't freedom exactly),
- including keeping citizens healthy---it is impossible to have a
- prosperous planet with bad healthcare. (Don't get me wrong, I have more
- positive impressions in the US :P)
- For a government to be able to handle social needs, it must not be
- corruputed. Theories such as the separation of powers exist, but in
- contemperory times, implementations such as the US have
- sometimes-corrupt but almost always ineffective governments. The Senate
- fillibuster is a important reason, but not the culprit. The culprit is
- the inherent eager to compete with other political parties and to gain a
- political advantage, rather than coorporating, working together, and
- actually managing the country with decent manners.
- Humanity's system of managing society progressed from the rule of
- monarchs to the rule of law. But laws can be unclear and
- misinterpreted. The recent development of mathematics and computer
- science may as well be utilized to create a system of society and
- government, which algorithmicly distributes power in an explicit manner
- (Maybe with something like monads, I haven't got into the mathematical
- part yet.)
- Godel Incompleteness tells us that we can never make a system of
- mathematics that gets understood the same way everywhere; math is also
- an evolving field (albeit very slowly). If this (currently nil) system
- is to be ever used anywhere (may be the island), we'll definitely find a
- lot of fissues. In such a system we also have the burden of educating
- people in abstract algebra, which is relatively easy compared to
- developing the system itself. My intuition tells me that Group Theory
- will come in handy, but that's just intuition.
- Currently, I host this project at [2]. I've only recently gotten into
- Group Theory and abstract algebra, it may take time for us all to come
- up with ideas. But it's worth trying.
- References
- ==========
- [1] https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/libreplanet-discuss/2021-10/msg00011.html
- My previous memo on the use of software in education, COVID-19 and
- the courts.
- Ironically, I was still using GitHub at the time. I recently
- deprecated all of my GitHub in a notice, and moved all of my current
- projects to git.andrewyu.org and project.andrewyu.org. The avenir
- repository is moving there some time, after I re-write the website
- with plain HTML---I don't see a reason to use a static site
- generator anymore. This GitHub link is not provided here.
- [2] https://project.andrewyu.org/libresociety
- A "checked out" version of the repository. The PDFs are of primary
- interest.
- git://git.andrewyu.org/libresociety
- The repository itself. SSH protocol version also exist, described
- in the PDF itself.
- https://notabug.org/andrewyu/libresociety
- A mirror of the above repository. Links Out
- =========
- [a] https://stallman.org/there-ought-to-be-a-law.html
- A collection of bills/laws "proposed" or agreed upon by Richard
- Stallman, mostly in support for a freer society, a less
- corrupt/corruptable government, public benefit, etc. I don't agree
- with all of them, but many of these will be taken into account in
- this project.
- Some of the thoughts I had during writing this memo will appear in the
- next commit of the project.
- This memo probably contains spelling errors and odd context-hopping.
- When sitting down in front of my computer on the actual book, I'll be
- more careful, and have a notebook and a pencil in front of me to plot
- relation maps. Please forgive me, a 13-year-old with an undeveloped
- brain from a non English-native country.
- Sincerely,
- Andrew Yu <andrew@andrewyu.org>
- :P
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