I’m not American but the right to repair is a socialist/communist thing that empowers poor people, and bothers companies that now have to follow more regulations. I don’t understand how it was accepted. But we’re living in weird times so…
You mean the insidious specter of socialism, with its tentacles of totalitarian control reaching deep into every aspect of private life. The one that threatens to strangle individual initiative beneath its crushing weight of collectivist dogma, while its shadowy operatives who side with communism secretly manipulate the levers of power from within, waiting for the perfect moment to strike and impose their godless Marxist utopia upon our great devices. /s
I’m not American but the right to repair is a socialist/communist thing that empowers poor people, and bothers companies that now have to follow more regulations. I don’t understand how it was accepted. But we’re living in weird times so…
You mean the insidious specter of socialism, with its tentacles of totalitarian control reaching deep into every aspect of private life. The one that threatens to strangle individual initiative beneath its crushing weight of collectivist dogma, while its shadowy operatives who side with communism secretly manipulate the levers of power from within, waiting for the perfect moment to strike and impose their godless Marxist utopia upon our great devices. /s