Questions about /Ted/

And again, Ted elaborates on how modern industrial society infringes uniquely upon human dignity. That's why it doesn't matter as much whether we know exactly what happens after its collapse (i.e., how far back would sociopolitical complexity be taken). And of course, the longer the collapse is delayed, the worse it will be once it comes.

society is so fucked up and on the other hand so sinister that smashing it is by now valid in itself, whatever comes after.

what he wanted was to upthrow the 'industrial' system, and let technology survive. Technology that is local, and does not depend on a global chain. He was not against technology but organised industrial society.

you got it wrong mate, he pointed out that the system cant sustain itself for ever, and the more complex it gets, more mayhem it causes when it breaks apart which is inevitable. he used the mammalian system to show an ideal state, and even mammals die, and that such systems can only be made out of natural selection and not conscious human planning.

they want the black man to loose his blackness, and stand in the shoes of white men, and live and act like them.

we can have the tech, without the organised industrial setup. he was not against windmills, and craftsmanship, he was against a global industrial chain. he asked for whatever technology that can survive autonomously

I’m not sure how that would work. You can’t expect every community to have the knowledge to maintain machinery

smashing it is all that needs to be done, what comes after is none of our business

it's uncanny that modern science began as literal witchcraft trying to get power over devils and control nature...did in fact play out...

>he pointed out that the system cant sustain itself for ever, and the more complex it gets,
No, you didn't read his essay. He thought society would become unstable in the near future, and that would be the key junction for eco-anarchists to crash civilization. After that key junction point if civilization still persists, then he said it would be likely to continue indefinitely with little threat to its existence.