[Hae-Joo] Social Experiments - Fighting for Ours

in #steemit7 years ago (edited)

In my last post, I compared the Steem blockchain to the American War of Independence.

I made the following analogy:

The creation and implementation of the Steem blockchain was like the declaration of independence.

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Which means that we are in a war of independence against the mainstream social media (the MSSM)


Mini-disclaimer: I'm just making these comparisons for the purpose of creating unity. I apologize in advance for all generalizations and historical incongruities. My main point is that in any revolution, there are ups-and-downs, there is inequality, there is opportunism, there is malice, and there is triumph... My point is that the struggle for the soul of this platform is worth it, and we need to become more solidly united together now more than ever. The future of not only this platform, but all of all future revolutions, depend on what happens now, what happens today. And for the record: yes, I know, they were all slave-owners. Some "enlightenment" they were all part of, huh. But still, think of how many people seeking to escape the worst forms of oppression and subjugation, found refuge in a land of opportunity that not only welcomed them, but actually enabled them to make something of themselves using their talents and skills. I think the analogy holds. People will be people, but let's not throw the baby out with the bath water.

I believe in this social experiment, no matter how flawed it might be.


In my analogy, the creators of Steem and the Witnesses were like the Founding Fathers.

The British Crown, taxing us without representation, can be seen as today's mainstream social media: Facebook, Twitter, YouTube... They can extract monetary value from our content, or worse yet censor it, without giving us fair stake in the whole enterprise... They've become tyrants that we must rebel against...

And that's why this revolution was needed.

Our young revolutionary republic can be seen as our alternatives: Steemit, DTube, DSound, and all the other Front Ends... They're represent our new institutions, freed from the subjugation of the powers of the Old World...

The Steemit White Paper is like the Constitution of the United States

And Steemit represents the Congress.

It's a forum designed for the exchanging of ideas. It's supposed to democratize our new found independence and to give a voice to those who have a stake in this new system... AKA: all of us who are done using the traditional forms of social media, and tired of being exploited by their nefarious and self-serving ways, for their selfish ends...

Well, let me expand on this analogy, and make the following statement. Just because we have our new platform, and are freed from the subjugation we experienced at the hands of those centralized power-hungry giants doesn't mean the battle is over...

The war has only just begun.

quote-every-generation-needs-a-new-revolution-thomas-jefferson-52-14-32.jpg

Source


I just finished reading @lexiconical's latest post...

In it, he highlighted how profiteering opportunists are gaming the system, cyphening wealth from our community for personal gain at the expense of the community. One just has to read Steemit articles such as this one to see there are clear abuses being committed...

Whales self-voting their worthless comments or other users exploiting bugs they found within the bidding-bots, there are plenty examples of people monopolizing the rewards pools for their own personal gain, and adding absolutely no value to the platform in the process.

Well, this is nothing new. In fact, look at any social experiment, this has always been the case.

One just has to look back to the early days of the American republic.

During the Revolutionary War (which I am comparing to today's decentralized cryptocurrency revolution), some of the people who made the biggest fortunes, just like today's vested whales and stakeholders, were leading Americans who were selling supplies and equipment to the Continental Army at inflated prices.

Most of the members of the Continental Congress at the time were America's most profligate and successful land-owners and tradesmen. (That's why they wanted representation back in England, and could be incentivized in rebelling against the British.)

@LexiconicalTom Paine, one of the greatest voices of liberty and independence responsible for fomenting revolutionary sentiment against the vested whalesBritish, famously called out some of these war-profiteers in Congress who were merely trying to enrich themselves, denouncing them as nothing more than frauds.

Rich congressmen were frequently caught making purchases of supplies in secret from their own (not so cleverly concealed) companies and personal business associates at higher prices and using their inside knowledge of governmental needs and plans as a means to engage in profitable business speculation.

Any similarities with what we see happening here on Steemit? With manipulating bugs in the bidbots, or self-voting senseless comments, to name but a few ways that corruption and greed are ruining the platform for everybody else?

👀


But let's not forget that on this platform there are incredibly committed and dedicated witnesses that spend countless hours curating young minnow's work and personally taking responsability for rewarding their contributions to the platform, to say nothing of their efforts to grow and sustain this platform, leading all of us on this platform to glory and riches in the process... I could name a few, but they know who they are. And we should remember that not everybody with a high-stake investment in this platform is out for pure personal self-enrichment... Many want the best for all of us... We should all remember to lend our support to them by voting for them as our witnesses and making sure they can continue to do the work they do...


Actually, you can read a great article about all of this war-profiteering and abuses that went on during the early revolutionary period here

What's important to note from this parallel between these two revolutionary periods, is that the members of congress were some of the richest men in America, just like the witnesses and vests here on Steemit are some of the richest and most powerful influencers on the Steem blockchain.

Something that @Lexiconical highlighted very well in his very important article was the following question:

What is the incentive for the rest of us to contribute quality content if all of the rewards are going to the same people who offer nothing to the platform? We do all the work, and they reap all the rewards. Is that also a similarity between post-revolutionary America and Steemit? Was this question on @Lexiconical's mind not also on good old Ben Frank's one as well?
Well, here's a key point I'd like to make...

America was back then, just like Steemit is today, a Social Experiment.


Sure, some things will never change. There will always be profiteers and opportunists trying to take dollars out of hard working people's pockets to stuff them in their own own.

These people are known as vultures.

And yes, America has always had to do battle against the entrenched financial aristocracy, and so will we here on Steemit... If we believe in Freedom and Equality, we will continue to have to struggle...


Like any social experiment, it's an ongoing process.


It can go any way we as a community of neighbors and friends are willing to fight and sacrifice for it to go.

Yes, as regular users, most of us mere minnows and dolphins, we can sit here with our jaws to the floor, stunned at the sheer amount of money that opportunists are cyphening from this platform, contributing absolutely nothing of value, and conclude that this is a rotten social experiment that we want to have nothing to do with.

Worse yet, we can conclude that we should follow their rotten example, and try to get the maximum pay-outs for the least amount of work possible.

That is Option A.

Option B, is that we make a stand, stage our revolt, and re-appropriate the platform for ourselves, and make a fair platform for all to enjoy in...


The blockchain is decentralized. It doesn't belong to any one person, it belongs to all of us.

What do you think early American colonists chose? What do you think made America the most prosperous and powerful nation in the world's history?

Did the poor minnows immigrants, landing in a far off, unfamiliar, even alien social media landscape continent think to themselves: "I guess this is gonna be worse than what I knew before? I should have never come here to begin with..."

Did they arrive there, get disheartened, and return back home to safe-old Facebook/Twitter Europe?

Even Africans who were kidnapped, betrayed, or worse... And arrived to America, not as indentured servants, but as other men's frickin' property...

Did they all go back to Africa at the soonest chance they got? Did they all want to set sail for Liberia when vessels were being commissioned for them to all go home after the Emancipation Proclamation?

No... There was something about this new place... This was their home. This was their birth land too, and they were just as fully deserving as anybody to make it there too.

Many chose to believe in the promise of making their own life in America... Though the lies and tricks that were played on the African-American population by the white man are too many to be recounted here... Those who were given 40 acres and a mule really did participate in the American dream, and their descendants are all the better off for it today, for sure...


There's no denying it... There were dire times... I'm sure some did lose heart... No doubt brave men and women's courage were tested...

Did many of them miss the simpler times before they were responsible for their own destiny..? Back in the tranquil comfort of serfdom, living on their lord's land, growing his food, fighting in his wars, having to pay tribute and swear loyalty to his cause... Of course some did...

Ignorance is bliss.

And independence is hard work. It's much easier to choose the path of least resistance... It's much easier to serve a boss than it is to be our own masters and rely only on ourselves for our own success.

But did the vast majority of these early Americans shake those thoughts off, lace up their bootstraps, wipe the sweat from their brow, and grind their ass off to one day make something of themselves?

You bet they did.

America through its shaky history did enjoy surges in egalitarianism... It wasn't always all bleak. Generations did make it beyond the status of their forefathers, and keep raising the bar... Many socio-political and economic battles were fought to right wrongs, seek retribution, settle grievances, redistribute the fruits of everyone's labor according to merit, and not entrenched privilege.

Hell, how much sacrifice was paid in blood to keep the American dream alive for so long?

A wise man once told me:

"Bad times breed strong men, strong men make good times, good times breed weak men, weak men make bad times."

If that is true, and we are indeed living in bad times, following all those good times that America enjoyed, then America may turn out to be a failed social experiment... We may have collectively lost the battle for freedom, justice and equality on that one. Who knows... Or maybe we are just around the corner from a revival... Maybe it is not even unique to America... Maybe the whole world is soul-searching, looking for the misplaced pieces of a fractured psyche facing oblivion...

Maybe all the past mistakes and follies of the past were for a reason...

Maybe they were to prepare us for the trials and tribulations that lie ahead...

So let us not squander and waste the lessons of history, nor the insights that we gained from past great revolutions.

And let's also not downplay the real-world significance of a truly revolutionary experiment like Steemit...

Do not doubt this for one second.

The Old Powers, Facebook, Twitter and Google, fear the hell out of any decentralized platform that they cannot buy up, subvert, warp, taint, undermine and dilute to the point of no recognition...

Though we may be a small community here... 10 thousand users who are actively empowering themselves and their own decentralized platform for information sharing scares them ten times more than 100 thousand users complaining about their policies on their platform...

Make no mistake... We are in a war...

Something like Steemit is the antithesis of their model of control of information and the source of their evil, wicked, and corrupt power.

Every meaningful post and reward that we contribute to this platform and attribute to our community, is another tea crate we are dumping in the Boston harbour...

Tea Party MSSM.png

Every attempt to curate each other's work, and participate in the growth and success of the community, is a successful gathering of essential supplies and ammunition with which to fight these monsters.

Every bit of valuable data that we can encrypt to our blockchain is a successfully planned and orchestrated guerilla ambush against the Red Coats...

For sure, we will still requires more recruits.. We need more minutemen listing up to fight these battles on the front lines.. We need more loans from France in the form of speculators investing big sums of cash into Steem and trading it on the exchanges...

We need more momentum if we want any chance to win this war and to truly gain our independence.

Steemit is a social experiment...

There will be losses.. There will be sacrifices..

But if everybody is only out for their own personal gain, this platform doesn't stand a chance, just like America's revolutionary war before it...

We must be vigilant of the snakes among us who would seek to undermine our efforts and contaminate our revolutionary spirit...

They are everywhere on this platform, just like any revolution... and though there is nothing that we can do to outright stop them, calling them out publicly (by post-shaming their behaviors, and flagging the crap out of their accounts), will prevent them from destroying all of us.

So stay vigilant my fellow Steemians.

And keep on Steeming for Peace, Abundance, and Liberty.


Thank you all for reading this lengthy post, and upvoting, following and resteeming if its message resonated with you...

Peace and Love

Hae-Joo


Sources Dove / Tea-Crates / Volture-Burns / Volture-LooneyToons

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Dude, what a great post! I would have nominated it for muxxybot curation but you've already exceeded the $10 threshold lol. I can tell that you really put a lot of thought into writing this. I've had similar thoughts about it all for a while now but haven't been able to put it into words, so it was cool to read that someone else had done exactly that.

Yo Damashii!
I knew you would vybe to this lol! So glad you gave it a read! :)
Innit true doe! I believe there's a way for us to make the dream work!
How? I'm not quite sure... But where there's a will, there's a way

And a lot of good people want to see Steemit and Steem really take off...

I hope the creator (Dan) was wrong, about how they messed up the rewards pool and Steem was never going to take off...

We'll see I suppose... I still believe with the activated and dynamic pool of users it has so far drawn, there's definitely a fighting chance for us here..

How that will play out, in what way it's all gonna fit together and click, I have no idea...

Somebody mentioned that the only way to make this platform work currently is to change the rewards distribution (90% curation rewards and 10% author rewards), and then somehow find a way for every users to invest real money into the platform.

An interesting solution I've been letting mulch over my mind these last few days

How do you think we keep the rewards pool going, eliminate spam, and keep this blockchain alive?

I'm not sure, perhaps coding a hard cap on bot limits or something?

You know what @imp.unity ? I felt the same thing as I was trying to understand how the eco system of steemit worked but my thoughts were not as organized as yours.

Glad to know I'm not the only one!

Yeah, just had to put in a little bit of work to organize my own!

It was a pretty complicated feeling before I started writing the piece, but I seem to have worked my way through it! I'm glad you find these thoughts organized lol, that was definitely my biggest concern is that I would just be spouting a bunch of nonsense in a seemingly nonlinear fashion! Thanks for dropping a comment! Means a lot to me :')

I think that all social experiment is what organizes and makes things reveal and come to light and believe in an orderly and appropriate, I congratulate you good post. Steemit is the present and future of social networks that set trends. I send you greetings from Venezuela. I hope we continue reading

Hey, met up with you on sola, came over here to say hi too!

I know right!
I was just about to do the same!

Thanks for stopping by!

Really liked your card by the way!

I got in a feud with a couple of the guys with trumpets in their names lol (I need to figure out what that's about!)

I got lectured pretty hard lol... 😋 Well, whatever, I liked the feel and design of the app, and wanted to support the project. I bought like 120 dollars worth of sol in the ico, but then I was a little dismayed to find that some people with 5 pictures of landscapes were making more tokens than I'd gotten with the 120 dollars!
Economically did not make any sense to me.
But I think the network with sola might be a lot bigger and work very differently than a blogging platform like Steemit, so maybe monetization might work. We'll see!

I'll hold on to my tokens until I can get my 120 bucks back, and if I never get them back, so be it!

I view that app as a good way to kill some time when I'm in the subway or just share something with the world when I just have a little thought or wanna post a pic or something. definitely not investing any serious time in there

Definitely following you on here, as Steemit is still the social media love of my life! 😍
Looking forward to reading your stuff (and not looking at some random pictures of the alps all day!)hehehe 😜

I don't think this platform is as decentralized as most people think. The power of the platform lies in the hands of only a few people, so how decentralized is it really?

I think you might have misunderstood what people mean when they say that it's a decentralized platform...it's decentralized in the sense that if Steemit.com ever goes down, we can still access the same blockchain and see the same data through other sites like Busy.org, mspsteem.com, etc.

In that way, yes, it's decentralised.

The blockchain is decentralized, but the distribution of New Steem is not! ^^'

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