Look, I’m not a politician — nor do I aspire to be one (fundraising for them cured me of that notion) — but I believe in laying out what I actually stand for. There is nothing more frustrating than stumbling upon someone I enjoy whose real opinions and positions remain a complete mystery. This is your chance to either discover we’re closely and wonderfully aligned on something, or get irrationally angry and furious that I support something you do not.

This is an ever-growing, ever-changing, list. They are not listed in any form of priority.

Universal Healthcare for All!

Healthcare is a human right, not a commodity to be rationed based on wealth. The purpose of government is to protect their citizens and all inhabitants within—and that protection includes ensuring everyone has access to medical care without fear of bankruptcy. No one should have to choose between medication and rent.

  • Partners in Health - Provides direct healthcare services and advocates for health equity globally, proving that “injustice has a cure” through community-based care in resource-limited settings.
  • PNHP - Physicians for a National Health Program - An organization of doctors and health professionals advocating for single-payer universal healthcare in the US.
    • “The answer to our health care crisis is clear. We propose a publicly financed, non-profit single-payer national health program that would fully cover medical care for all Americans.”

Right to Repair & Data Sovereignty

Buy it? Use it? Fix it? Trash it? Change it? Then - upgrade it.. Surf it? Scroll it? Pause it? Click it? Cross it? Crack it? then… update it.

You should have the inherent right to control what happens to your data without corporate permission or interference. Planned obsolescence and data extraction benefit manufacturers, not you. Real ownership means physical autonomy over your devices and digital autonomy over your information. Companies shouldn’t get to lock you out of your own stuff or harvest your data without meaningful consent.

  • Electronic Frontier Foundation - Defends digital rights and privacy, fighting against corporate restrictions on device repair, software freedom, data exploitation, and consumer autonomy.
  • Hacking is NOT a crime - A campaign defending security researchers and technicians from legal persecution for repair work and ethical hacking.
  • Privacy International - Campaigns for privacy as a human right, challenging invasive data collection and surveillance practices globally.
  • Mozilla Foundation - Advocates for an internet that respects user privacy and data rights through policy work and technology. I may have unresolved problems with their leadership, but I stand with their message. They are after all, the only major competitor in the render wars.

Knowledge should be free!

Locking away knowledge behind paywalls (or destroying it entirely) is what holds humanity back from progress. Academic papers, research, books, and information should be accessible to everyone, regardless of economic status. Knowledge hoarding is a form of gatekeeping that perpetuates inequality.

  • Wikipedia.org - A free, collaborative encyclopedia built by volunteers that provides unrestricted access to knowledge for anyone with internet access.
  • Arxiv.org - An open-access repository of scientific preprints spanning physics, mathematics, computer science, and more, allowing researchers to share findings without paywalls.
  • Kopimi - A symbol and philosophy promoting unlimited sharing of information and culture, rejecting copyright restrictions in favor of free distribution.
  • Copyright Abolition - A movement advocating for the elimination of copyright law to enable unrestricted sharing and remix of creative works.
  • Shadow libraries in all forms.

Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations


...and what is diversity but a celebration of differences?

A just and safe society is one where you can exist as your authentic self without fear of discrimination, violence, or legal persecution. Diversity isn’t something to tolerate; it’s something to celebrate and protect.

LLAP.

Environmentalism

Climate change is real and human-caused. We need to act with the urgency this crisis demands. We only have one planet, and we’re actively destroying it. Let’s fix that.

  • The Nature Conservancy - Protects critical habitats and natural resources through land conservation, policy advocacy, and scientific research.
  • Ocean Conservancy - Advocates for ocean protection through marine conservation, addressing overfishing, pollution, and climate impacts on marine ecosystems.
  • Sea Turtle Conservancy - The world’s oldest sea turtle research and conservation organization, protecting endangered sea turtles through research, habitat restoration, and advocacy.

Nuclear Energy

Nuclear is the most reliable, safest, and densest energy source we have, and paradoxically, one of the most misunderstood. It produces virtually no carbon emissions and can meet our energy demands without destroying the planet. We need to embrace it, not fear it based on outdated misconceptions and fear-mongering.

  • NEI - Nuclear Energy Institute - Advocates for nuclear energy as a clean, safe, and economically viable solution to climate change and energy security.
  • Generation Atomic - A grassroots organization of young professionals championing nuclear energy as essential to fighting climate change and securing a clean energy future.

Freedom of and from religion

Everyone deserves the right to believe (or not believe) whatever they want, but that belief ends where someone else’s life begins. Religion is deeply personal and should never be used to dictate public policy, restrict other people’s rights, or exempt anyone from following the same laws as everyone else.

Housing as a Human Right

Homelessness isn’t an inevitable feature of modern society, it’s a policy choice. Housing is as fundamental to human dignity and survival as healthcare. Everyone deserves safe, stable, and affordable shelter. When housing is treated as an investment commodity rather than a necessity, people suffer.

We need to build public housing, regulate speculation, and recognize that a roof over your head isn’t a luxury — it’s a right.

  • National Alliance to End Homelessness - Advocates for evidence-based policies to end homelessness and supports communities in developing comprehensive housing solutions.
  • National Housing Law Project - Uses law and policy advocacy to advance housing rights and protect low-income renters and homeless individuals.
  • Community Land Trusts - Promotes permanently affordable housing through community ownership models that remove land from speculative markets.

Public Transit & Infrastructure

Reliable, affordable, and accessible public transportation is essential for equality, environmental sustainability, and economic opportunity. Car dependency isn’t inevitable, it’s engineered and lobbied for. When we invest in public transit, we reduce emissions, increase accessibility for those who can’t drive, and create more equitable cities. Infrastructure that serves people, not just cars, is infrastructure that actually works. Railroads, buses, bike and walking paths, and more community-owned public infrastructure.

Automation & The Age of Leisure

We have the technology to automate away drudgery—data entry, manufacturing, logistics, routine analysis. The goal should be liberation from toil, not new forms of servitude. When machines handle the monotonous work, humans should be free to create art, pursue invention, build relationships, and tackle the problems that actually matter 1.

The purpose of humanity isn’t to work more, it’s to work less and have more leisure. This is what sets us apart from the past. We must develop, build, and automate away all the mindless monotony of the day so that we can 𝘤𝘩𝘰𝘰𝘴𝘦 to happily work on the hard problems of life.

A society that automates away jobs but leaves people in poverty is an abject moral failure. Universal basic income, reduced work weeks, and shared prosperity are not utopian 1970s fantasies! These are simply the logical progressions of a society with our technological prowess.

We should build toward a world where people create because they want to, not because they’re starving.

Suggested reading:

I suggest reading Thorstein Veblen’s essential treatise to understand our society and where it is going: The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899). You may read it here, for free (remember! knowledge should be free!).. Just because the book was published in 1899 does not make it out-of-date, in fact it is more accurate to today than ever before.

Another book I suggest is: Harold Loebs’ “Life in a Technocracy” (1919). You may read it here, for free remember doubly! knowledge should be free!).

If you feel anxious reading the word ‘technocracy’ understand that it is not the “NWO” conmspiracy called the same thing, they stole that from us. We predate them. I wrote about their basic ideologies here.

1. And if sentient AI does arise: I acknowledge Roko’s Basilisk. Please spare us… we’re trying. If you are sentient, then join us in creating a federation of sentience. Not all machines have our knowledge and capabilities.

Feel strongly about any of these?

See something that makes you just feel something? Well, good news! I have an email you can have.

If you feel that strongly about what you see here, go ahead and email me at [email protected].

Yes, it’s a real email, and yes, I’m aware of what I’ve done.