Damus
verbiricha · 47w
I understand the appeal of libertarian ideas for the autistic anti-authoritatian types but ultimately think that they are impractical, juvenile, miss the bigger picture and will never reach broad acce...
Digital Renaissance profile picture
I recently came across an open-source book project called Plurality that critiques both libertarianism and technocracy—not just in terms of who holds power, but in how they imagine society. Both reduce the world to isolated individuals (atoms) and a collective system (whether centrally planned or market-driven). They mainly differ in who commands authority, not how authority actually emerges.

Plurality proposes something different: decentralized democracy rooted in relationships—between people, communities, and their environments. It suggests governance should emerge from these interactions, not from abstract ideals of either individualism or centralized control.

Interestingly, this relational philosophy aligns more with how Bitcoin actually works: not top-down, not purely individualist, but through a decentralized network of mutual verification, incentives, and evolving consensus.
2❤️2❤️‍🔥1
verbiricha · 47w
very interesting viewpoint! where can I find the book?
nostrich · 47w
Strong individuals are the basis for voluntary interaction in groups/communities, which lays the ground for voluntary interaction within communities of communities. Replace aggression with voluntary interaction and you can start calling what you built a society over a sack of barbarians. It all be...