Happy Labor Day. I wrote a Wikipedia article about the gay, anarchist, anti-profit publishing collective Come!Unity Press (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Come!Unity_Press) after stumbling across a poster they printed in 1971.
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@molly0xfff I've wanted to make a modern version of community memory but I'm not sure where I'd put it.
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@j2kun library, perhaps?
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Damn, that lead me down the rabbit-hole of the political protest posters at the Oakland Museum of California (https://collections.museumca.org/?q=category/2011-schema/art/political-posters). Some great stuff there.
Nice vocabulary flex on palimpsestic, something this printing/graphics nerd did not know.
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Robert Pickeringreplied to Molly White last edited by
@molly0xfff
Where can we read more about the kitten named Kropotkin?!? -
@molly0xfff thank you for reading and sharing! and Iโm so happy that you made a C!UP Wikipedia entry.
I actually just visited the Community Memory papers at the Computer History Museum archive in California a couple of weeks ago. Thereโs so much there. Would love to chat more!
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@soulellis would love to!
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Molly Whitereplied to Robert Pickering last edited by
@robertpi all i found was the brief mention in the Signal interview!
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@darryl_ramm thank you Dimension 20
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@molly0xfff Now I'm imagining a Wikipedia editor as a character. A very knowledgeable druid who can pacify angry characters by talking to them, sometimes eventually putting them to sleep, or on the other win any argument they want to, wearing down the opposition until they just leave.
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@darryl_ramm that's just me in real life