quotingjust been chatting with some liberland people about some outreach and community project ideas. the main street of the village has terrible mobile network coverage, and a member is a specialist in networking.
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gonna start cooking some plans up. i'm building up relations with the locals and i'm here for only one reason: i love it here. peace and quiet, tractors driving around and yapping dogs that i'm learning how to make happy and lick my hands. gonna do what i can, both helping technically and with negotiating with locals to let us put mesh nodes and get networks connected.
so all the people walking to do their shopping in the only remaining shop in town can catch up on their facebook and whatsapp and incidentally provide grandma with a way to video call her grandkids who ran away to germany.
there is unfortunately some vibes around the way that the local authorities have made life difficult for liberlanders but i'm not even one of them and just a friend who is who also can't come here invited me. and i think it's worth building up good vibes with community. all the fighting just does nothing except lead to more fighting.
helping your neighbours leads to security, and this facilitates growth and health.
i'm not interested in "fighting for muh rights" i want the neighbors to appreciate and value my presence. and that's how it should be for anyone who wants to have their right to unclaimed land be recognised. otherwise, they have to have an army bigger than can stand shoulder to shoulder and "enforce muh rights"
so silly. just being nice to your neighbours and doing your own thing, that's how you build community.
hopefully soon i will have photos to share of getting some decent internet on the main road.
The Beave on Nostr: This is the kind of stateless society that I want. ...
This is the kind of stateless society that I want.
