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hazards:fediverse [2025/09/18 15:43] – [The Fediverse School of Thought] Humphrey Boa-Garthazards:fediverse [2025/09/30 22:44] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
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 [{{ :hazards:71819796_3399078236799495_6245222021383323648_n.jpg |This is how it happened.}}] [{{ :hazards:71819796_3399078236799495_6245222021383323648_n.jpg |This is how it happened.}}]
  
-In recent decades, many government agencies //(and their criminal "contractor" friends)// have gotten in on the whole "internet" gimmick. This was not so much a problem for the rest of us back in the 90's and early 2000's, when there was no cooperation between federal assets as to how to represent the interests of their wealthy donors on the internet. This changed with the Obama administration //(and the subsequent Trump and Biden administrations)//, with the executive branch //(and its varied corporate benefactors)// leading the push for a more centralized internet. Eventually these parties secretly declared everything from social media and chipmakers to niche internet forums all "//zero-trust infrastructure//" that needed to be "//regulated//" to "//stop terrorism//." And to seal the deal, a rubber-stamp legislature and judiciary enabled it every step of the way.+In recent decades, many government agencies //(along with a faceless network of [[hazards:ngos|NGOs]] and their criminal "military contractor" friends)// have gotten in on the whole "internet" gimmick. This was not so much a problem for the rest of us back in the 90's and early 2000's, when there was no cooperation between federal assets as to how to represent the interests of their wealthy donors on the internet. This changed with the Obama administration //(and the subsequent Trump and Biden administrations)//, with the executive branch //(and its varied corporate benefactors)// leading the push for a more centralized internet. Eventually these parties secretly declared everything from social media and chipmakers to niche internet forums all "//zero-trust infrastructure//" that needed to be "//regulated//" to "//stop terrorism//." And to seal the deal, a rubber-stamp legislature and judiciary enabled it every step of the way.
  
 Through this prison, which every internet user now inhabits like crabs in a bucket, various agents of the state //(and their plausibly-deniable pawns)// push carefully constructed political narratives, pit subcultures against each other, and stifle all creative dissent that could threaten the bottom lines of the Wall Street-approved media monopolies. They maintain this machine with armies of goons that have been programmed all their lives via video games, computer algorithms, anime and Marvel movies. In between policing dissenting opinions on the internet and advocating the expansion of the Greyface Empire overseas, this Digital Borg freely shills for whatever major media properties need shilling at the time. Through this prison, which every internet user now inhabits like crabs in a bucket, various agents of the state //(and their plausibly-deniable pawns)// push carefully constructed political narratives, pit subcultures against each other, and stifle all creative dissent that could threaten the bottom lines of the Wall Street-approved media monopolies. They maintain this machine with armies of goons that have been programmed all their lives via video games, computer algorithms, anime and Marvel movies. In between policing dissenting opinions on the internet and advocating the expansion of the Greyface Empire overseas, this Digital Borg freely shills for whatever major media properties need shilling at the time.
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