Today is Seize The Means of Production Day #comrades.

So let's talk about what that means, in today's high-tech, distributed world.

From my home, I can produce: Books (but not paper, or ink), Music (but not instruments), Movies (but not the media on which to distribute them), various plastic bits and baubles (but not the plastic itself), applications/games/programs (but not the machines that they run on.)

I am a producer, but in order to produce, I am also a consumer of raw and semi-raw materials.

Often, I can recycle those raw materials (I pick up used instruments and audio gear, I repair old computers) or I will soon be able to do so (I want to get a grinder and an extruder for turning failed prints in to new filament, for example.)

We live in an age of abundance. There are millions of blank CDs and DVDs out there. We could stop making them for a while, and be okay with the overstock.

But eventually, the Overstock won't be enough.

We need to be able to make CD-Rs in our basements. We need community owned CPU factories.

The Raspberry Pi enables me to make All Kinds! Of Neat Things! but it depends on an international shipping infrastructure and the goodwill of several corporations.

We need a community made pi. We need a #comrade64

But see, even that leaves out the fact that current computer chips come out of a massive industry of mining and manufacturing.

There is so much money changing hands. And so many precious and valuable resources that we are running out of. And the human cost is enormous. Even if we manage to get a community/public owned chip foundry, we're left relying on and exploiting the existing capitalist infrastructure for collecting raw materials. (Think of the human cost.)

And we've made So Many of these things already. How many of you have more CPUs than people in your home? (Most of you, if not all of you.)

I have my laptop, two tablets, my phone, my server, my projector, my TV, my gameboy, the router, my microwave, and even my coffee maker has a CPU in it, etc.

Not to mention the dozens of discarded machines I've adopted. The Pentium 4, with it's 4GB of ram that only gets booted when I need to test something on Windows XP.

We throw away cell phones all the time. I probably have four or five that are 5-7 years old.

Old android devices that are hardly good for anything anymore, just gathering dust in a drawer.

And Cellphone recycling? It's a joke. So much human labor, so many places for people to get hurt, or to get it wrong.

The Social revolution will require CPUs. Will require computers. Will require technology. But we're going to have to find new ways to do those things. (And that won't be easy!)

A lot of tech problems could be solved if there was a requirement for companies to either ship devices with open bootloaders, or open the bootloaders of their devices after a specific amount time.

We should be able to open up our devices, and change them to our specifications.

Is there a good reason my old android phones aren't already running a custom, mesh networked, web server OS, and seeking out other devices with same to form a community internet alternative?

Okay, moving on from the Tech for a bit.

Clothes! There are places in Georgia where you can find Cotton growing wild. It's a pain (literally) to pick, and it's a pain to process, and it's a pain to manufacture.

The only reason our clothes today are cheap is because we are supporting factories in Asia or Africa or wherever that are viciously exploiting their workers.

For most of us, the clothes we wear are a symptom of human suffering.

I can sew a shirt, or a pair of paints. (I've done it a bunch, for stage productions.) I can screen print designs on clothes, or use dyes on fabrics.

What I can't do is turn plants in to threads in to fabrics.

Can you? Can anyone you know?

My great grandmother probably knew how, but I doubt she had done it since she was very small.

The point that I'm building to, I guess, is that we've put ourselves in a position where we have abundance. We're constantly manufacturing far more than we're consuming.

Many of us are also, as individuals or small groups, manufacturers of goods.

If we want to talk about seizing the means of production, we have to talk about manufacturing the difficult stuff, and about the global impact of our manufacturing.

We have to talk about sourcing raw materials. We have to talk about exploitation.

Some of the answers will come from technological innovation, but that technological innovation needs to come from an intentional and thoughtful place.

We have to make an effort to make the world a less horrible place.