Look, I get it.
You’re tired.
You’re tired of pointless meetings that could have been emails.
You’re tired of making PowerPoints about PowerPoints.
You’re tired of commuting an hour each way to sit in a cubicle and pretend to be busy for eight hours.
You’re tired of jobs that feel like they exist just to keep you busy while someone else gets rich off your misery.
What if I told you there’s a way out that doesn’t involve violent revolution, or living in some commune?
What if the solution is actually simpler and more practical than you think?
The Problem We All Know Too Well
Right now, most of us are trapped in what economist David Graeber called “bullshit jobs”, work that serves no real purpose except to keep the economic machine grinding.
We stock shelves with products designed to break.
We process insurance claims designed to be rejected.
We write reports nobody reads.
We attend meetings about meetings.
Meanwhile, the rent keeps going up, healthcare costs are insane, and student loans follow us to the grave.
We work harder and longer than our grandparents, but somehow we can’t afford what they had.
The system is broken, and we all know it.
And worst of all, those same people in authority are now profiting off the greatest advancements in human labour, automation and AI, to threaten you to accept worse and worse conditions, or face unemployment.
Now, it doesn’t matter who shares more of the blame here.
Corporate greed, competition, poor government, or billions outside the West now entering the globalized workforce, only to be turned back into paupers with the dawn of AI.
This genie is out of the bottle now, with all major governments
This Isn’t Marxism or Anarchism
Before you roll your eyes and think “here we go with the communist manifesto again,” hear me out.
This isn’t about class warfare, or dressing up collectivization, even “voluntary”, in new words.
And we’re certainly not nostalgic for 19th-century economic frameworks.
Accessism begins from a different premise: that technology has already outpaced ideology.
What Accessism challenges is not your right to create, it’s the need to justify your existence through labor just to survive.
We are moving past the outdated logic that ties human worth to employment or purchasing power.
We’re not fighting over the crumbs of scarcity anymore.
We’re building a post-scarcity infrastructure, where access replaces ownership in the areas that matter most, food, housing, education, healthcare, and tools for creation, not through redistribution, but through the intelligent application of automation, networks, and open systems.
This isn’t about smashing the state or propping it up.
It’s about superseding obsolete systems altogether, both economic and political, with cybernetic coordination, open-source logistics, and global access protocols.
It’s about upgrading civilization, not managing its decline.
Why It’s Not “You’ll Own Nothing, And Be Happy”
I might already hear some of you pull out your tinfoil hat, and believe it’s just some globalist World Economic Forum conspiracy to give up all your goods.
Far from it.
Learning from the mistakes of previous cybernetic planning projects and experiments has made us realize how dangerous a single point of failure is.
So any goods you have will remain yours, unless you realize they are outdated, and want to donate them as more resources to be managed, upgraded and recycled with the best technology realistically available.
And if you feel the system is growing dictatorial?
You can always disconnect your communities from the network, and retain the better protocols, or just go back to a monetary system directly.
Why You Should Join Us
The transition isn’t about revolution – it’s about evolution.
We’re already moving toward this system whether we realize it or not:
Automation is accelerating whether we like it or not. We can either let it create mass unemployment and inequality, or we can use it to free everyone from unnecessary work.
Open source everything is already transforming how we create and share knowledge. Wikipedia, Linux, Arduino – these show us what’s possible when we organize around sharing instead of hoarding, and how having programs that manage loads, and automatically build and spin up how many copies you need.
The sharing economy (despite its current corporate capture) points toward a future where access matters more than ownership.
Why should everyone own a car that sits unused 95% of the time?
And why not let the mapping system coordinate with the car manufacturing system, so we know just how many cars we need, and making sure one is already available and ready for you at peak hours(much less crowded, once you no longer need a job), or whenever else you need it, instead of paying, or getting one assigned to you by some committee?
What’s In It For You
Imagine waking up tomorrow and not having to check your bank account before deciding what to eat.
Imagine pursuing that hobby you never have time for.
Imagine not having to pretend to be busy at work.
Imagine not having to choose between seeing a doctor and paying rent.
This isn’t utopian fantasy – it’s completely achievable with the resources and technology we have right now.
We just need to organize differently.
The Real Obstacle
The biggest barrier isn’t technical or economic – it’s psychological. We’ve been conditioned to believe that suffering is noble, that life is supposed to be a struggle, that people who don’t work are worthless.
But these beliefs serve the people who profit from our suffering, not us.
The question isn’t whether we can build a world where everyone has what they need without working meaningless jobs.
The question is whether we have the courage to demand it.
The open access economy isn’t a pipe dream – it’s an inevitable evolution. The only question is whether we’ll be part of building it, or whether we’ll keep punching the clock until the robots make us obsolete anyway.
Your move.