The Viet Cong and Kurdistanis are “living with nature”? I don’t even know what that really means. It also seems to me to be against the spirit (if not the practice) of anprim to simply outsource industry.
Like I said at first, I think it (anprim) sounds nice but only as a kind of vague ideal. Fun to think about, but I can’t take it seriously as any kind of revolutionary aspiration. And again, I don’t think any of your examples (which are worth taking seriously, btw) are anything like my understanding of anprim.
I mean, none of them would describe themselves as an-prim.
Does it matter which tags they associate with? As long as they are not doing industry, and living with nature, that’s all that matter.
The Viet Cong and Kurdistanis are “living with nature”? I don’t even know what that really means. It also seems to me to be against the spirit (if not the practice) of anprim to simply outsource industry.
Like I said at first, I think it (anprim) sounds nice but only as a kind of vague ideal. Fun to think about, but I can’t take it seriously as any kind of revolutionary aspiration. And again, I don’t think any of your examples (which are worth taking seriously, btw) are anything like my understanding of anprim.