i think at some point we need to recognize that the deliberate oversimplification of technology and our understanding of and interaction with it is an integral part of what keeps people dependent on tech corporations; that real software freedom is impossible without education and media literacy; and that labeling people who promote ways of using technology that enable & encourage actual comprehension and choice as "elitist" is an active attempt at keeping the general public in their dangerously uneducated state.

the easiest way to keep people subservient is to keep them dumb. knowledge is power; and we should have power over the tools that we spend the majority of our waking hours with instead of them having power over us.

RE: https://circumstances.run/users/davidgerard/statuses/115383414643559768

@lizzy There is an analogy with democracy and party politics to be made here as well. If you don't understand your politics and instead just vote for any candidate who belongs to 'your' party, it also tends to keep the general public in an uneducated state.

James Madison: 'A popular government without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce, or a tragedy, or perhaps both.'

My daughter (15) pointed out that Washington warned about the two party system.

@lizzy
US politics: Democratic and Republican.
Phones: Apple and Google.
Computers: Apple and Microsoft.