Archive for the ‘anarchyroll media’ Category



Rent the world, own nothing: how the economy of access replaced ownership—and why that’s not freedom, it’s feudalism in a hoodie.


We Don’t Own Our Music.

We don’t own our movies.
We don’t even own our cars.

What used to be ours to keep is now ours to rent—on a recurring, never-ending loop. The world has been restructured around access, not ownership. But access without control isn’t freedom.

It’s a digital landlord economy.
And we’re living on rented ground.


The Convenience Con

The pitch was irresistible: subscribe and simplify.

From Netflix to Microsoft, Spotify to Adobe—subscription models promised us seamless access to everything. No bulky boxes. No up-front costs. Just “click and go.”

But convenience was the bait.
Dependence was the hook.

Now we can’t cancel half our apps without playing hide-and-seek in the settings menu. Our tools and files vanish the second a payment fails. Even our refrigerators and vehicles may stop functioning if we miss the latest software toll.

This was never about helping us.
It was about controlling us.


Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

From Tools to Tethers

We remember when we could buy software once and use it for years.
We remember when a car’s features were hardware, not paywalled.
We remember when a song download meant we owned it.

But now:

  • Microsoft Office is a subscription.
  • Tesla’s seat warmers require a monthly payment.
  • E-books on our Kindle can be deleted remotely.

We’ve moved from products to platforms to prisons.
And the doors lock automatically when the rent is late.

“The war on general-purpose computing is a war on ownership.”Cory Doctorow, author & digital rights activist


The Algorithmic Lease

This system doesn’t just live on our bank statements.
It feeds on our behavior.

We’re managed by code. Trained by design. Nudged by algorithms that know exactly when to tempt us, prod us, or penalize us.

  • Free trials renew without notice.
  • Cancel buttons are buried in UI mazes.
  • “Are you sure you want to cancel?” guilt-trips pop up like clockwork.

We’re not being served—we’re being optimized.
For extraction. For retention. For profit.

“Surveillance capitalism unilaterally claims human experience as free raw material for translation into behavioral data.”Shoshana Zuboff, author of The Age of Surveillance Capitalism


The New Feudalism

“You will own nothing and be happy.”

A phrase once dismissed as dystopian is now just business strategy.

Let’s look around:

  • Homes are rentals.
  • Cars are leased.
  • Content is licensed.
  • Tools are cloud-locked.
  • Even tractors are DRM’d to block our right to repair.

This is corporate enclosure 2.0.
But instead of kings and lords, we’ve got CEOs and cloud platforms.

We’re not customers anymore. We’re subscription serfs—locked into infinite payment cycles just to function in daily life.


Photo by ready made on Pexels.com

We Still Have Choices

This isn’t anti-tech. It’s pro-agency.

We can seek out companies that still let us buy once and own forever. We can use open-source tools that aren’t tied to profit motives. We can refuse to mistake convenience for autonomy.

Every time we choose ownership, even in small ways, we push back against a system designed to make us permanent renters.

Because ownership still matters.
And freedom doesn’t auto-renew.


🗞 anarchyroll presents

Excess and Algorithms
Wisdom is resistance. Truth over tribalism.


🎬 This article was reimagined as a visual essay — watch the reel below.

@anarchyroll_

Subscription Serfdom We used to own what we paid for. Now we lease our lives—locked into endless subscriptions, optimized by algorithmic landlords. 🗞 Full article at anarchyjc.com ☯️ Truth over tribalism ♾️ Wisdom is resistance. #DigitalFeudalism #SubscriptionEconomy #ExcessAndAlgorithms #anarchyroll #subscribe #economy #economics

♬ start the action – patrickzaun

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Redlining may be gone from the law—but it still shapes the land.

And the land is heating up.

The climate crisis isn’t hitting everyone equally.
In American cities, the poorest neighborhoods are often the hottest—and not by coincidence.

Historically redlined areas denied loans and investment during the 20th century, also lost access to green space. These neighborhoods were paved over, boxed in by highways, and stripped of shade. Today, they face extreme heat without the trees or infrastructure to soften the blow.



Recent studies show that formerly redlined zones can be up to 13°F hotter than wealthier neighborhoods just across town. This isn’t just an inconvenience. It’s a death sentence during heatwaves.

“The impacts of discriminatory housing practices are still felt today—not just in wealth and education gaps, but in the very air people breathe and the temperature they endure.” — Dr. Rachel Morello-Frosch, UC Berkeley environmental health scientist

Tree canopies reduce urban heat, but trees were never planted in “undesirable” neighborhoods. The result? A map of climate inequality that mirrors maps of racial exclusion from nearly a century ago.

This is environmental racism. And it’s still killing people.



“Extreme heat kills more people in the U.S. than any other weather event, and it disproportionately affects low-income, urban communities of color.” — CDC Climate & Health Program

Fixing it takes more than a few green grants or tree giveaways.

It requires climate justice rooted in housing justice—recognizing shade as a right, not a luxury.

It means reckoning with the legacy of racist urban planning.
It means rewilding cities with justice in mind.
It means treating shade like infrastructure.

And it means confronting the systems—past and present—that turned housing discrimination into climate danger.

Because redlining didn’t end.
It just got hotter.


🧯 Frackishima is the environmental lens of anarchyjc—where class, climate, and corruption collide.


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🌳 Trees were never just decoration. They were protection 🔥 Formerly redlined neighborhoods are up to 13°F hotter today. This isn’t just climate—it’s class and race and policy 👁️ Visual essay: Heat Islands and the Housing Line 🧯 From the Frackishima desk at anarchyjc.com #EnvironmentalJustice #ClimateRacism #UrbanHeat #Frackishima #Redlining #ClimateJustice #anarchyroll

♬ Intro – Mad Dog

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Published by @anarchyroll via Anarchy Journal Constitutional


“We don’t need a truth squad. We need a First Amendment.” — Matt Taibbi, Congressional Testimony


Governments don’t need to pass laws to control speech.
They just need to pressure the platforms.


The Censorship-Industrial Complex is the unholy alliance of federal agencies, tech corporations, and pseudo-academic disinformation labs — working together to decide what ideas are safe enough for the public.

It starts with an email from DHS.
It ends with your post silently disappearing.

This isn’t a left vs. right issue.


Anti-war journalists, independent researchers, COVID policy critics — all have been flagged, suppressed, or algorithmically erased. Not because they were wrong. But because they were inconvenient.


“The people who are trying to censor speech are not protecting you. They’re protecting themselves — from accountability.” – Edward Snowden


This isn’t about protecting democracy.
It’s about protecting power.

The Twitter Files showed us the blueprint: FBI flagging accounts. NGOs vetting narratives. Platforms complying behind closed doors. But Twitter was just the tip — Facebook, Reddit, YouTube, even Microsoft were all in on it.

The architecture of censorship is modular now.
And no one is coming to dismantle it from the inside.

These aren’t isolated incidents. They’re rehearsals. The system keeps improving — not at identifying truth, but at engineering consent. Real-time surveillance of trending topics. Preemptive labeling of emerging narratives. Pressure campaigns behind the scenes. By the time the public hears a story, the terms of engagement have already been set.


“Censorship is never about stopping lies. It’s about stopping inconvenient truths from gaining traction.” – Glenn Greenwald


They call it safety.
We should call it by its name: control.

So we speak.
We write.
We resist.

Because the First Amendment isn’t a suggestion.
It’s a firewall.

anarchyjc.com | Anarchy Journal Constitutional

Wisdom is Resistance

🎬 This article was reimagined as a visual essay — watch the reel below.

@anarchyroll_

🚨 The Censorship-Industrial Complex isn’t a theory — it’s a pipeline. Government agencies NGOs Platforms All working to silence dissent. Not wrong. Just disruptive. 🔏 Truth over tribalism 📍 More at anarchyjc.com #freespeech #censorship #twitterfiles #surveillance #anarchyroll #independentmedia #mediawatch #truthseeker

♬ Void(Original ) – 崔洪喆

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Inside the calculated architecture of algorithmic addiction—and why the systems keeping us hooked aren’t accidental, they’re engineered for profit.


Photo by Gabriel Freytez on Pexels.com

This Isn’t a Bug. It’s the Business Model.

Addiction isn’t a side effect. It’s the product.

The algorithms driving our feeds, for‑you pages, and autoplay queues weren’t built to serve us. They were built to own us—to capture attention, distort behavior, and extract time. The longer we stay, the more they win. And they’ve gotten very good at winning.

“Big Tech firms… have developed more and more sophisticated AI models… more successful at their goal of ensuring addiction to their platforms.” — Michelle Nie, “Algorithmic Addiction by Design” (2025)

This isn’t content delivery. It’s behavioral engineering at scale. And it’s working exactly as intended.

Hook the Brain, Hijack the Future

Let’s call it what it is: neurological warfare for profit.

Infinite scrolls keep us locked in motion. Likes and shares drip dopamine through variable rewards. Personalized algorithms feed us just enough novelty, rage, or validation to keep the lever pulling. And the lever never runs out.

“Persuasive design is deliberately baked into digital services… to create habitual behaviours.” — 5Rights Foundation, “Disrupted Childhood” (2024)

We are not customers. We are inputs in a profit‑generating loop, optimized not for our benefit, but for our addiction.

What It’s Doing to Us (Especially Them)

The damage isn’t theoretical. It’s measurable. Especially among kids and teens—those still forming identities, boundaries, and brains.

An algorithm doesn’t care if a 13‑year‑old spirals. It cares about engagement metrics.

“TikTok algorithms fed adolescents tens of thousands of weight‑loss videos… vulnerable accounts were served twelve times more self‑harm and suicide videos.”
American Journal of Law & Medicine, 2023

The platforms know. The companies know. And still they choose to push what hooks hardest.

It’s exploitation. But because it’s dressed in UX and recommender systems, it slides by as innovation.

Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

Legal Fiction vs. Corporate Reality

Law hasn’t caught up—but it’s beginning to stir.

Some EU voices are framing this as a consumer protection crisis, not just a mental health one.

“Hyper‑engaging dark patterns… reduce users’ autonomy and may have additional detrimental health effects.”
Fabrizio Esposito, “Addictive Design as an Unfair Commercial Practice” (2024)

The SAFE for Kids Act in New York aims to curb algorithmic targeting of minors. Europe is considering stricter design ethics laws. But Big Tech lobbyists work overtime to water down reform—and delay the inevitable.

Addiction is profitable. That’s why it persists.

Resist the Feed

This isn’t personalization. It’s manipulation.
And the only way out is resistance—personal, political, cultural.

Start small. Microtasks become momentum:

  • Turn off autoplay.
  • Disable nonessential notifications.
  • Use browser extensions to block algorithmic feeds.
  • Delete one app for a week. Watch what happens.

These aren’t solutions. They’re trim tabs—small shifts that change the system from below.

Then go bigger:

  • Push for dark‑pattern bans.
  • Support platform‑transparency laws.
  • Demand algorithmic opt‑outs.

Your time, your attention, your mental state—they’re not raw materials to be mined.

They’re yours. Take them back.


anarchyjc.com | Excess & Algorithms

Wisdom is Resistance

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🎯 ALGORITHM ADDICTION We scroll, swipe, and tap — and the algorithm learns. This <1-minute visual essay explores how tech hijacks attention and reshapes identity. #DigitalAddiction #TikTokAwareness #AlgorithmAddiction #MentalClarity #SelfAwareness

♬ Mystic – Perfect, so dystopian

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“The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion.”
Noam Chomsky

They marched under one banner—No Kings—across over two thousand U.S. cities. The chants echoed: Democracy, not dynasty. People over billionaires.

And for a moment, it felt like something real. Unity. Purpose. A mass of people moving as one.
That matters.

But here’s the thing: marches don’t dethrone kings—votes do. Not the kind fed to us by billionaire media or corporate-funded parties. But the kind we carve out ourselves, with calloused hands and clear eyes.

Because if the system crowns kings disguised as candidates—red tie or blue tie—then we haven’t abolished royalty. We’ve just rebranded it.

Let’s be clear: this isn’t about shaming the other half of the working class. The ones who didn’t show up. The ones who don’t trust any of it.


They aren’t the enemy. They’re the evidence.


Evidence of a rigged system that leaves most Americans disillusioned, exhausted, and priced out of participation.

“Transparency is for those who carry out public duties… Privacy is for everyone else.”
Glenn Greenwald

Then here’s the catch: protest is ignition, not the engine. Activism fades. If you’re not moving toward real political power, the system just waits you out.

“A system unable to stop this must be very sick indeed.”
Matt Taibbi

We’ve seen this before. In Occupy, in anti–Iraq War protests, in the George Floyd uprisings. They all said something important—but without sustained, organized follow-through, the system waited us out.

Protest is the ignition. Organization is the engine.

This moment is only a spark—unless we stop waiting for permission to lead ourselves.
No kings. No puppets. No more billionaires pulling the strings.


anarchyjc.com | Anarchy Journal Constitutional

Wisdom is Resistance

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@anarchyroll_

Protesting is better than nothing. But it’s not enough. Not anymore. Real change doesn’t come from chants alone. It comes from organized labor, grassroots movements, and political power built outside a two-party system that’s fully captured by billionaires and the military-industrial complex. No kings. No puppets. No excuses. #NoKings #GeneralStrike #BeyondTheBallot #fyp #currentevents #ProtestArt

♬ realization – FutureVille

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