Leading the Great (FB) Boycott

At the beginning of 2021 I declared that I would get off Facebook by the end of the year, in my blog here. I am now one month away and fully ready to honour my declaration.
I am prepared for this eventuality, as I have had practice at being without social media. Throughout the past several years I had many social media detoxes, ranging from one to six months. There were several reasons for them, but they all connect and overlap - to reset myself, wean my addiction, and to learn how to live in the present moment and focus on face-to-face connection.
These detoxes have always been very powerful. I feel like I'm stepping out of a haze, able to see more clearly. And stunned how I became so embedded in such a hazy reality, only able to notice once I stepped away from it.
When I rediscover such level of presence I wonder to myself whether I could possibly fully wean myself off of social media technology, and maintain this state more fully. I know people that don't own either laptops or cellphones, or both, and they are the most present and pleasant to be around.
A Blessing and a Curse
Technology really is a tremendous blessing and curse. When you adopt new technologies you, in a way, are signing a deal with the devil. You unlock unbelievable powers of productivity, but become entrapped in a system chronically maladaptive to human health, and a vicious cycle predicated on ever growing demands on said productivity. Perfection and efficiency become mirages perpetually beyond grasp.
In recent years more of social media technology's curses than blessings have come to light for me. The first light shed on such curses was through articles about how big tech has gotten too big. All of the major tech companies have been subject to major lawsuits for antitrust activities, unfairly squashing competition and maintaining a stranglehold on market dominance, as elucidated in my blog at the beginning of the year, linked at the top of this blog.
This issue is not isolated to tech companies, but is present across all major industrial sectors such as big oil, food, pharma and natural resources, such as logging, which I experienced firsthand at Fairy Creek. The corruption of not only major corporations, but any large organization including governments, is a reflection of humans' inability to handle power over others, which I wrote about in this blog.
We cannot run from this realization anymore. Large power structures preside over and dominate almost every aspect of our lives. The first step is to become aware of this. To realize with real eyes. The next step is to take action - to reduce our dependence on these large power structures.
Profit Over Peace
The further we isolate behind screens and depend on robotic algorithms to determine our social interactions, the more we hunker into our siloes and lose our capacity to communicate face-to-face and resolve conflict with each other, plunging us into loneliness and depression. This ever growing divide and epidemic of mental health is intentionally exacerbated by FB, as recently exposed by a whistleblower. FB incorporates algorithms that enable posts to go viral, which don't exclude posts with extreme hate or intentionally misleading propaganda. In fact, such posts tend to go viral and are catalyzed by these algorithms.
This has become apparent during the pandemic, the most divisive time in human history. FB, with its market dominance, can influence the fate of such global issues. So what does it do? It worsens these issues in the name of profit!
In a time where division is at an all time high, and our ability to resolve conflict through face-to-face communication has been eroded by social media, exacerbated by big tech, it is time to wean our dependency, walk away from big tech and find alternative community-oriented solutions. It is more important than ever, against mounting odds, to meet face-to-face with people of diverse walks of life, and who hold both shared and conflicting views. Holding physical space for each other is what's needed to overcome our differences.
I wrote more deeply about this division by social media in a recent blog. It is time for me to walk the talk, lead by example, and leave FB for good.
Follow Your Intuition
My intuition is telling me that it is time to leave FB.
Intuition is that whisper in your gut, that gut feeling. It gets drowned out by excess stimulation, as well as the voice of the ego, coming from the head. Furthermore, tapping into your intuition requires being in a state of deep presence, achieved through being in unstimulating environments and connecting with nature.
When you tap into your intuition, you attract synchronicities, coincidences that are not coincidences. These synchronicities can lead to beautiful connections and abundance you could never have expected or called in through logic and hard work alone. I know because since embracing my intuition, my life has been a series of neverending synchronicities that has brought unprecedented transformation and happiness.
I have since realized that there is a disconnect between synchronicities and technology. Technology, particularly social media, takes you out of presence, thereby silencing your intuition. People my age and younger, growing up with videogames and social media, never get a chance to disconnect from technology and discover they have an intuition, let alone can attract synchronicities.
This is perhaps the most exciting thing about permanently disconnecting from FB - to take my synchronicities to another level. While FB did connect me with a lot of opportunities, I have faith in my ability to manifest a new reality without it. Besides, intuition and synchronicity have already manifested beautiful community that takes care of me and brings me countless opportunities. Neglecting these powers would be doing a disservice to myself.
Take It Or Leave It
I leave you with lessons from the beautiful book, Ishmael.
Ishmael is an ape who gains the ability to communicate telepathically with humans, and offers an intelligent third party perspective of human history and current day society. He categorizes society into takers, those who colonize other humans and destroy the environment, and leavers, those who leave mainstream society to create a sustainable society of their own. Ishmael espouses how society's power structures depend on its people's dependence on them to maintain their power. Instead of fighting them, he suggests simply leaving society behind. If enough people did this, these power structures would lose the legs they stand on.

Leaving society behind is easier said than done. But if this idea is something that fascinates you, I suggest reading Ishmael, because it breaks down these concepts in more detail. Ishmael was instrumental in my own awakening and personal transition from taker to leaver. Now I am connected to at least one community that, by working towards reducing its dependence on the power structures that run society, is simultaneously showing others the light and weakening the power structures.
With the combined global threats of climate change and the pandemic, people are starting to wake up and become sick of the tyranny. They are coming up with solutions that decentralize power, putting it back in the hands of the people. For those not quite ready to leave FB just yet, patience is an ally.
Existing Alternatives
There are several alternative networks working towards the critical mass necessary to dethrone FB:
> Minds.com is the first social network to be completely tied to cryptocurrency. MeWe is a social network that emphasizes data security and privacy. However, MeWe has supposedly been coopted by the extreme right and there are a lot of hate groups and right wing propaganda on it
> Librti.com is a new social media network made in Canada, which doesn't sell your data. It has attracted many users opposed to and organizing against the sweeping mandates undermining citizens' rights and freedoms. If you do join, you can link to my profile here
> reVillager is a FB-like platform that prioritizes deepening human connection above profit-oriented algorithms. It is a grassroots app developed by a dear friend of mine, still in its nascent stages, but with strong potential to revolutionize how we social network
> Signal app is my encrypted messaging platform of choice, and the best alternative to FB messaging and WhatsApp, which is also owned by FB. Telegram also does this, but is a bit less secure
I will continue to remain on Instagram, which is owned by FB, but hope to find an alternative to this in the future. You can follow me @my2barefeet
When I first heard the term Cancel Culture, I thought this was what it was referring to. Well, I think we should coopt Cancel Culture, to refer to cancelling the large power structures!
Ask yourself, "Do you want to use a social network that
sells my data, allows hate propaganda
to go viral, and division in society to worsen, all in the name of profit? Do you want to use products that line the world's billionaires' pockets so they can go to space?"
"Are you ready to take the bold step and leave FB? Are you ready to lead the way so others follow your bold example?"
I am... Are you?
