I started elementary (the open source project) as a high school student. When we were building the first versions of our desktop environment, one of our core developers was in high school and his parents accompanied him to the Ubuntu Developer Summit. How many things we have today wouldn’t exist if young people weren’t allowed to participate? The cost of not creating spaces that we can safely share with young people is too high
We’ve pushed young people completely out of our public physical spaces and now they’re getting pushed out of our digital spaces as well. Where are they supposed to go?
@danirabbit lock them in the closet until they're 18 (?)
@tranquillity @danirabbit i think that's genuinely what those people want
@tragivictoria @tranquillity @danirabbit They’re not content with keeping kids in the metaphorical closet, they gotta lock them in a literal closet too
@tranquillity @danirabbit
But when they are released at 18, they must be perfectly fitting in members of the society. ☝️
@kawunngg @danirabbit yep, gotta magically figure it out :>
@kawunngg
Not necessarily. Not as long as there are for-profit prisons.
@tranquillity @danirabbit
@danirabbit this gets at the heart of it. It sounds obvious, but not enough people have really internalized that their community includes children, and our responsibility towards them is as community members.
@danirabbit Into the streets, and looking for change. The ‘powerful’ never learn.
@danirabbit To the mines.
That's the plan, isn't it? Work the mines or get pregnant and stay home.

@Mimesatwork @danirabbit

Also don't learn about racism, sexism, global warming or activism.

I think a big reason for the push to erase kids is Gretta Thunbergs activism because it threatened the oil industry

"The most common theme in the banned non-fiction books was activism and social movements."
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/may/07/banned-non-fiction-books-doubles

Report shows banned non-fiction books doubled over last school year in US

New PEN America report analysed 3,743 unique titles removed from libraries and classrooms and found books about activism and social movements were targeted

The Guardian

@alienghic @Mimesatwork @danirabbit Land of the free...

Up until about a year ago, I saw Europe as the last bastion of actual freedom (although we have more restrictions on free speech and I was threatened with cops for things I said online by people who were provably abuser-types and flying monkeys).

With the latest wave of restrictions like chat control and age checks, I don't think there's anywhere left.

@danirabbit Darkweb? I'm guessing that age BS will push more in that direction.
@CliffsEsport @danirabbit Honestly, that's one of the main possible outcomes I'm seeing. There are plenty of "normal" hidden websites.
@danirabbit
We don't need to go anywhere. We just have to fight for what belongs to us otherwise we shall not run enough to find somewhere safe for us.

@danirabbit there is a story of cultural theory I've had in my head since my early 20s, which I've been slowly evolving. We keep going people siloed into artificial groups of all one age bracket until they're 18, and often until their early 20s if they attend higher education. It's unnatural, and it's an artificial situation that they will never encounter again the rest of their lives.

As a result, because they are shut off away from their parent's culture they develop their own. Which is why every generation has their own music, fashion, and even language. It also makes parent's feel alienated from their kids and vice versa. Then these young people are thrust out into the real world, and they never experience such an environment again.

I had the misfortune of being labeled "gifted" while not getting the actual diagnosis that really applies (autistic). Instead of letting "gifted" kids move at their own accelerated pace we generally keep them in the same group with their "peers" because if we put them in with older kids they would feel alienated. That's the theory. Fuck, I was already alienated. Then I had to wait around and try to occupy my brain while the other kids caught up. That just made me feel even less party of the group. If the internet had been a thing back then it might have really helped my mental health.

I'm rambling a bit. I could do the subject s lot more justice long-form, and I've been thinking about doing just that when time permits. Suffice to say, I think a lot of society's ills stem from generational divide. Locking kids away from online life will absolutely make that worse.

@jeang3nie @danirabbit
Eyy, we we’re rambling simultaneously! :D
@jeang3nie @danirabbit Very much same sort of history. And agreed that it's doing no one any favors.

@danirabbit
There won’t be anywhere left to go.

This, the social media bans that is, carry the same sickening energy as when restaurants employ ”teenage repulsers” or whatever you can call them. Those devices that play high frequency sounds that only children and teenagers can hear to ward them off public spaces.

Then youngsters started going online to express themselves and to build their own opinions. And now, nope, let’s set up age restrictions to *protect* the children. This is, in my opinion, like putting a bird in a cage to *protect* it, while it just wanted to fly free.

I might be preaching to the choir but I’m expressing my right to free speech. It seems like it’s going to be increasingly important for us to do that, if I’ve read the signs right. I hope that I have not.

@danirabbit the unpopular observation is that we used to have lots of spaces and it was for everyone’s wellbeing. There was never a universal space and trying to do that is causing a lot of the problems.
@danirabbit The Satanic Temple is always open

@danirabbit Some locals and I, as well as several other allied groups, are providing local young people private group access to physical spaces (with their choice of how to characterize the gathering internally and externally), their choice of banned books in print or DRM-free ebooks and audiobooks (hence those compatible with surveillance- and censorship-free apps), their choice of protest music on CD (with use of USB optical drives), their choice of outdoor activity gear (with their choice of coaching), their choice of how to convert one of our elders’ lawns into a permaculture garden, or their choice of art, craft, textile, cullinary, woodwork, electronics, or mechanical supplies (with their choice of volunteer expert guidance).

Outwardly, they may be going to a study group or tutoring session or whatever else they need to call it to keep various controlling people off their backs. Behind closed doors, they may be reading and discussing every book their local school board and library board has taken off the shelves, linking their local banned book club via video with another one in a neighbouring community whose demographics make them targets of locals’ bigotry, sharing in and dancing to each other’s protest music, modding thrifted clothes into body-pluralistic defiance fashion possibly with outer layers to camouflage when expedient, or working with an engineer, a mechanic, and an electrician to convert a pre-enshittification era ICE car into a BEV.

I’m not one of the facilitating older folks with a bunch of unneeded space or free time or saved money to share, but it only takes one or two in the community network to provide them that (or a few more, if groups have markedly different preferred activities). What I bring is experience cat herding and expertise providing and instructing in use of secure and private communications, and decades of studying underground resistance movements. Others bring skills as counsellors or social workers. Others bring expertise in activities the young people choose to do in the private spaces the few well-off community network members donate use of. Others design the public-facing front (such as the study group or volunteering organization website and social media), to let those escaping coercive control conceal what they’re doing.

Organize. Whatever the fash try to deny them, provide. Then step back as much as you can while keeping everyone safe, allow them their privacy, facilitate their autonomy, and follow their lead when they need guidance or support.

@danirabbit Working as slaves /s
@danirabbit when I saw this boosted I didn't see the preceding post, and thought this was about age restrictions and id etc for social media - which kind of shows your point, how thorough-going this exclusion of the young is.
@danirabbit Church, bible studdy, and to their rooms where they are seen but not heard.
@danirabbit simple answer: they aren't. they're supposed to have nothing outside their parents, their school approved reading materials and ,in the cases of a lot of the people pushing this, the church

@danirabbit and that question is one that no parent wants to have to ask about their child.

When there's no obvious place to exercise an interest in a healthy way, it'll be done in a sketchy place in an unhealthy way.

@danirabbit They'll get let into our spaces as long as they do exactly as we say.
@danirabbit
I’m Rania from Gaza 💔
We lost our home, and now my children and I are living in a fragile tent with no protection from the cold or illness.
Watching my children suffer while I can’t provide even the basics is breaking my heart every single day.
Please don’t leave us alone in this pain 🙏
Even the smallest donation or a simple share could help us survive 🤍
@danirabbit We live in a place where the state, and its paid up “elected” agents, look at children like they’re animals to be controlled. Of course, seeing how things are going, our same government does not seem too crazy about the adults, either. Control and profits are the twin evils and motives of our age.
@danirabbit Some of the powerful have plans, but I think they've all drunk too deeply of the idea that they can do whatever they want and let the externalities take care of themselves. And what they want is for anyone and anything that questions them or gets in their way to not exist anymore.
@danirabbit seems pretty clear they're going to hit the streets. if we're lucky, ready to scrap
@danirabbit
They yearn for the mines
@danirabbit To the illegal spaces
@danirabbit “I stared a company that created an operating system while still in high school” may be one of the coolest and simultaneously hottest things I’ve ever read. You’re like Kim Possible.
@FinalGirl haha okay to be fair we bootstrapped for several years. I didn’t get to work on it full time until I was like 25
@danirabbit you did that in high school. I was playing DnD and drinking enough to destroy my liver.
@FinalGirl yeah I didn’t really start partying and drinking until I was like 22/23? I was extremely straight laced until me and my big ex broke up. I was installing Gentoo on the computer in the back of my business finance class as a senior, which I’m sure the IT department loved 😅
@danirabbit strictly speaking social media: the rates of depression are also way up there now because of tweens getting jedi mind fucked into algorithmic induced insanity. intoxicating algorithms should perhaps be outlawed and client sided filters be made stronger and more obvious

@danirabbit I remember seeing young people at both MozFest and contributing to various parts of Firefox and Thunderbird.

They are valued for what they could do, the perspectives that they had (and led others to) and the continuity it offers a project.

What OpenSUSE is doing is really not smart on many levels. Lets hope it is not a precedent.

@danirabbit I understand and agree with you but I was really confused at first as I read it "I started elementary school as a high school student". My mind went immediately to a Billy Madison situation...
@danirabbit
Absolutely, younger generations should have a voice in these matters, as their energy and perspective can offer insights that older individuals might lack.
@danirabbit I tried to re-parse the first sentence of this post like 5 times before giving up and reading ahead to realize what it meant

@danirabbit I don't think "safely" is even relevant. I had unfiltered access to the net since I was ~12 and I turned out fine. A friend told me she started watching porn when she was 13 and she turned out fine.

Yes, some people end up as NEETs/shut-ins/incels but those are outliers good for clickbait headlines. If we (decisions should be made by people, not politicians) are to restrict freedoms, we need sufficient proof of a causal relationship.

Until them, age-restrictionists can fuck off.

@martin_t i was thinking of safety more in terms of from predatory adults. In terms of content I wish that our society was focused a lot more on violent content. I’m not a child psychologist but I think being exposed to extreme violence and death is probably not good for anyone to see let alone a child. Being exposed to sexuality as a teen seems vaguely developmentally appropriate. I remember reading gay smut with my friends in class lol
@danirabbit I got my start contributing to open source as a high schooler. That was really important for me.
@danirabbit Young people are people, and they need the same things as everyone else.

@danirabbit 100% agree. There is a huge range of contributions young people can make (and have made). In all fields, and I do not exaggerate.

I used to be a special prize judge for the US national science and engineering fair. (Was Westinghouse, then Intel). Every year I was astonished by the work of students who were often very young. One year I met a young woman at the competition, age 13 or so, and she was brilliant. She was there every year with something new. A brain computer interface at age 16! The next year I got her a hosted day at Caltech to hang out, attend some lectures. Not your ordinary college interview. A well known professor of astrophysics told me later that she asked better questions than his graduate students! Caltech offered her a free ride, a stipend, a fully equipped lab, an assistant … she ultimately chose MIT which was closer to her home. She has had a brilliant career.

@danirabbit This is very surprising to me because I thought it was a requirement to finish elementary before starting high school.

This is a joke, and I’d like to apologize to you for making this joke.

@danirabbit Thank you for your and the folks hardwork \o/

@danirabbit

It's also unfair to those young people. They're being treated like violent criminals, locked away from society, when they haven't done anything wrong. It's horrifying.