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A batch of the best highlights from what Todd's read, .

So this is what I have come around to, this is how I have made sense of my obsession with anarchism: the first target of anarchistic practice ought to be whatever it is *in me* that resists anarchy—what resists negotiation, the turning toward the Other as neighbor and potential collaborator. I return to Odo’s line, *“What is an anarchist? One who, choosing, accepts the responsibility of choice,”* but I add this: The responsibility of choice arises when I acknowledge my own participation, in a thousand different ways, in the imposition of order on others. This is where anarchism begins; where the turning aside from the coldest of all cold monsters begins; where I begin. The possibility of anarchic action arises when I acknowledge my own will to power. Self-dispossession begins when I say to myself: *Je suis Sabul.*

Between Chaos and the Man

Alan Jacobs

We often have no other option than to persevere when a challenge is unavoidable (getting fired, battling illness, losing a loved one, etc.), but we can also persevere intentionally when a challenge is avoidable. When we do, we accelerate Vertical growth with intention.

The Map

Keith M. Eigel, PhD

People will never stop being horrible on the internet. There will never not be garbage. But in a functioning society, someone comes to collect the trash every week. If private platforms are to become communities, collectives, agoras, tiny new societies, they have to make a real effort to collect the garbage.

The Internet of Garbage

Sarah Jeong

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