I recently read through Abbie Hoffman's Steal this Book ( http://www.tenant.net/Community/steal/steal.html ), and was thinking it might be fun and useful to make an updated, crowdsourced version (maybe as a wiki or something). Basically I think it would be cool to have a centralized, free collection of practical resources and information to help revolutionaries survive, thrive and fight effectively. Theory is great, but I've found actually getting out and doing stuff IRL to be the best way to combat doomerism/apathy and feel connected to the struggle.

Does something like this already exist? The two closest, more recent things I've seen are: "Recipes for Disaster" (lots of great stuff): https://we.riseup.net/assets/35370/crimethinc.recipes.for.disaster.an.anarchist.cookbook.pdf and "Ecodefense" (mostly just monkeywreching/sabotage tips, but pretty dope): https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/various-authors-ecodefense-a-field-guide-to-monkeywrenching

Those two are great, but already outdated in some places. A wiki would have the advantages of being free, easy to keep current, capable of supporting multiple media types (e.g., links to video tutorials, external resources and contact points for orgs) and could be collectively created/maintained. Also we could just blatantly steal the good and still relevant bits from the aforementioned books.

What topics would people here find interesting/useful? Some random ideas off the top of my head include: security culture, small-scale farming, gun safety, lockpicking, protest tactics, encryption/network security, sexual health, shoplifting/scamming, union organizing, psilocybin mushroom cultivation, first aid, graffiti, recipes for cheap meals, city-specific survival guides for the unhoused (or anyone), squatting, tenant's rights/eviction support, self defense, fitness/nutrition... what else?

  • pooh [she/her, love/loves]
    ·
    3 years ago

    This is not a law, it’s a policy of the credit score people and it only applies to collection agencies, not original creditors, so don’t just fuck off your cable bill one month and expect nothing to happen (basically it’s worth nobody’s time and pay to have to deal with disputes over small money from collection agencies so they don’t bother with it, but original creditors are 99.999% likely to have all the paperwork proving you owe the money)

    Thanks for the correction. I assumed this was a law, but apparently it’s a feature of newer FICO models (8, 9, 10) but present in the older ones which are used for things like mortgages. So it still could have a small impact, but generally it seems safe to say that you can typically ignore them? I always have, and it’s never impacted my credit score at all.