I’m so scared that you’re right. I have been sitting here watching the “don’t let games die” movement just explode with support in what feels like a week and feeling bittersweet about it. I’m really happy that the movement is getting so much attention, but in contrast https://generalstrikeus.com/ has slowly crept up 100,000 new signatures in the months since I became aware of it.
It’s depressing that something so important can’t even approach the movement that keeping old video games around already has.
Signing petitions is the easiest and laziest form of activism and incredibly unlikely to change anything. A general strike is a huge risk to the people involved in it, but has the power to cripple a government and force change. 300,000 people committed to risk their livelihood by not showing up to work is a hell of a lot more courageous than 1,000,000 people signing an online petition that comes with no risk.
Even worse is that so many people from the US support it but won’t even petition their own government. Critikal is from the US, is a millionaire, has a large following, but (at least to my knowledge) has never used any of that in an attempt to enact political changes in the US. For me, that is way more depressing.
It also doesn’t involve likelihood being fired from your job and potentially being made homeless, while also being harrassed and assaulted by police (and going into medical debt to recover from it).
For general strike US to become a viable thing, I think Trump, Musk or another R-nutjob has to come out and say how silly that idea is. Then with some publicized backlash to that, people will sign up to do it en masse, possibly with a few mayors or governors’ support.
Debunking PirateSoftware’s misconceptions (being charitable) is what spurred on the gaming sphere’s mass attention to it.
I’m so scared that you’re right. I have been sitting here watching the “don’t let games die” movement just explode with support in what feels like a week and feeling bittersweet about it. I’m really happy that the movement is getting so much attention, but in contrast https://generalstrikeus.com/ has slowly crept up 100,000 new signatures in the months since I became aware of it.
It’s depressing that something so important can’t even approach the movement that keeping old video games around already has.
Signing petitions is the easiest and laziest form of activism and incredibly unlikely to change anything. A general strike is a huge risk to the people involved in it, but has the power to cripple a government and force change. 300,000 people committed to risk their livelihood by not showing up to work is a hell of a lot more courageous than 1,000,000 people signing an online petition that comes with no risk.
Even worse is that so many people from the US support it but won’t even petition their own government. Critikal is from the US, is a millionaire, has a large following, but (at least to my knowledge) has never used any of that in an attempt to enact political changes in the US. For me, that is way more depressing.
For starters, stop killing games is European.
It also doesn’t involve likelihood being fired from your job and potentially being made homeless, while also being harrassed and assaulted by police (and going into medical debt to recover from it).
For general strike US to become a viable thing, I think Trump, Musk or another R-nutjob has to come out and say how silly that idea is. Then with some publicized backlash to that, people will sign up to do it en masse, possibly with a few mayors or governors’ support.
Debunking PirateSoftware’s misconceptions (being charitable) is what spurred on the gaming sphere’s mass attention to it.