Modern Monitory Theory is the idea that if you have sovereign control of your money, you can just print more. This theory is insane. More USD was issued (in the form of real currency, not loan backed reserves) between now and 2020 than in all of America's history. It's insane and a massive devaluation of everyone's money. It's the reason that the floor of a single family home grew from $250k to over $300k in most areas.
Governments have been uncontrollably adding to their money supplies for the past few years, but not adding actual value. Everyone suddenly decided "Hey, Japans insane GDP to debt ration is a great idea!" .. it's a death spiral ... possibly even an intentional one. A planed demolition.
There isn't a single founder who ever said that the way to respond to massive, ongoing, long-standing violations of the constitution - was to wait to get more good people in congress to turn it around.
Not one. Ever.
Instead, the people of the several states need to refuse to comply, resist and nullify - that's THE RIGHTFUL REMEDY - to usurpations of power by the federal government.
Anything less than that? will be temporary, at best.
https://86box.net/2025/02/25/riva128-part-1.html is absolutely the kind of thing that's my bag, baby
I also hope Linux distros finally start dropping Firebox and Thunderbird as their default browsers and mail clients respectively. Red Hat and Canonical are probably going to continue bundling Mozilla products for years to come, but everyone else has zero excuse to continue including Firefox.
For those worried about what's going on with #Mozilla's new T&C for #Firefox and seeking alternatives to Blink-based browsers (aka Chrome-in-a-trenchcoat), consider helping @WebKitGTK (a port of @webkit), used by apps throughout the FreeDesktop.
#WebKit/WebKitGTK/WPE is effectively the only other mature/production-ready web engine you can use *today*, not many know that (see also https://github.com/Fyrd/caniuse/issues/6807).
I hedge my bets by simultaneously helping QA Firefox and Epiphany (WebKitGTK) for parity.