quali dovrebbero essere in nostri primi riferimenti interdisciplinari da considerare:
1 ) lotta per il miglioramento delle condizioni all' interno delle carceri, inclusa la prospettiva di lavoro e casa DOPO
2 ) adesione al movimento PER il diritto al suicidio ( ... se desiderato, assistito )
3 ) il movimento PER la legalizzazione della cannabis, ANCHE ricreativa
4 ) movimenti, che vogliono garantire i diritti anche agli animali, e cercano di deintensificare gli allevamenti
5 ) sostenere il diritto all' aborto entro il terzo mese ...
6 ) movimenti che mirano al diritto piu' ampio all' ISTRUZIONE ed il miglioramento della stessa
7 ) movimenti, che difendono la 'libera opinione', e vogliono ridurre la CENSURA al MINIMO POSSIBILE 8 ) diritto alla TRASPARENZA
aggiunte più “politiche” che potrebbero emergere
Laicità radicale dello Stato Libertà di ricerca scientifica Critica alla sorveglianza digitale Diritto alla disobbedienza civile Riforma profonda della giustizia penale etc.
fate voi le vostre AGGIUNTE, per favore condividete le vostre proposte Marietta / gothp1
https://chatgpt.com/share/6952f56e-cac0-8001-ad56-8b36df4323d6 ( ... ) Chiusura (che potresti usare nel post o nel nuovo gruppo)
Questo non è un programma di partito. È una costellazione di lotte, connesse da un rifiuto comune delle gerarchie opache, della censura preventiva e della delega cieca.
Chi vuole partecipare non deve chiedere permesso per pensare.
Interdisciplinary References of the New Group ANTI-COERCIVE PSYCHIATRY
1. Criminal justice and prison conditions
Struggle to improve conditions inside prisons. Right to work, housing, and social reintegration after prison. Overcoming a purely punitive logic. References: restorative justice, critical criminology.
2. Self-determination at the end of life
Right to suicide, if desired. Possibility of assistance, in full respect of dignity and informed consent. References: secular bioethics, civil rights.
3. Substance policies
Legalization of cannabis, including recreational use. Harm reduction and an end to criminalization. References: public health, individual freedom.
4. Animal rights and transformation of farming
Recognition of fundamental rights for animals. De-intensification of industrial farming. Critique of the extractive industrial model. References: animal ethics, political ecology.
5. Right to abortion
Defense of the right to abortion within the first three months. Real, free, and unobstructed access to services. References: secularism, personal rights.
6. Right to education
The broadest possible right to education. Qualitative improvement of teaching. Free access to knowledge. References: critical pedagogy, knowledge as a common good.
7. Right to communication
Right to express oneself and to be heard. Education in communication, listening, and conflict. Reduction of linguistic, cultural, and technological barriers. References: dialogical education, participatory democracy.
8. Freedom of opinion and reduction of censorship
Defense of free expression. Reduction of censorship to the minimum possible. Clear distinction between dissent and violence. References: civil rights, political philosophy.
9. Right to transparency
Transparency in decision-making processes. Access to information. Rejection of opaque and hierarchical structures. References: radical democracy.
10. Radical secularism of the state
Real separation between state, religion, and imposed morality. Public policies grounded in rights, not dogma.
11. Freedom of scientific research
Defense of free research, even when inconvenient. Rejection of ideological or economic constraints on knowledge.
12. Critique of digital surveillance
Opposition to mass profiling and control. Defense of privacy as a political right.
13. Right to civil disobedience
Recognition of civil disobedience as a democratic tool. Protection of those who practice it non-violently.
14. Deep reform of justice
Critique of punitive justice. Reduction of imprisonment as an automatic response. Centrality of responsibility, not revenge.
15. Structural anti-hierarchy
Rejection of pyramidal and invitation-only structures. Open access to information. Rotation of roles, no fixed leadership.
16. Real pluralism
Coexistence of even conflicting positions. No exclusion for uncomfortable opinions.
17. Right to internal dissent
Conflict is not a problem to eliminate. It is an essential component of democracy.
Protection of the civil and human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans or queer people, free from discrimination and violence. Recognition of sex-based rights, including the protection of female-only spaces and categories, particularly in areas such as sport, shelters, prisons, and healthcare. Defense of freedom of expression, including the right not to be legally compelled to use specific pronouns. Recognition that protections based on biological sex remain legitimate under the law, and that no individual has a legal right to compel speech from others. Commitment to open, lawful, and non-coercive debate on these issues. References: civil rights law, freedom of expression, sex-based equality.
Commitment to a New UN, negotiated between the BRICS countries and the G7 states, with few but essential competences. Guarantee of women’s right to abortion, up to the third month of pregnancy. Guarantee of the right to assisted suicide. Guarantee of the right to freedom of expression. Guarantee of the right to adequate housing, defined as a minimum of 45 square meters per person. Guarantee of the right to work, with 24 hours per week as the standard working time. Guarantee of an Unconditional Basic Income, sufficient to cover water, food, and energy. Active promotion of peace among all nations, including the support of referendums as a democratic tool.
20. Commitment to direct democracy and a unified global voting system
Support for direct democracy as a core democratic principle. Establishment of a single electronic voting system, issued and guaranteed by a New United Nations, founded on multilateral treaties between BRICS and G7. Recognition that only a rebalanced and genuinely supranational institution can ensure common standards, transparency, and public oversight, removing electoral processes from national, economic, or partisan interests. Use of blockchain technology to guarantee traceability, immutability, and verifiability of votes, without compromising voter anonymity. Rejection of postal voting, as mail-based systems introduce opaque and vulnerable steps incompatible with a coherent digital democracy.
I consciously chose not to address internal aspects (such as the non-mandatory use of medication), because these require specific, situated, and collective work.
My intention was different: to build a framework. A framework of external, interdisciplinary, political, and cultural references within which a group that defines itself as ANTI-COERCIVE PSYCHIATRY can recognize itself and find orientation.
In this sense, I did the work of a sociologist: not writing internal regulations, but clarifying the perimeter, the values, the possible alliances, and the common ground.
The issue of non-coercive medication is already contained in the title and in the overall framework. The development of internal practices then belongs to those who work daily within the group and its processes.
I have opened the space. Now that space can be inhabited, discussed, challenged, and developed.
Guarantee of the right to have children, with a socially supported limit of up to two children per person or per family, ensuring sustainability, equality of opportunity, and the well-being of future generations.
The value of a life is not subject to prior evaluation; what must be assessed is the responsibility of society to guarantee autonomy and dignity, including in the presence of disability
quali dovrebbero essere in nostri primi riferimenti interdisciplinari da considerare:
ReplyDelete1 ) lotta per il miglioramento delle condizioni all' interno delle carceri,
inclusa la prospettiva di lavoro e casa DOPO
2 ) adesione al movimento PER il diritto
al suicidio ( ... se desiderato, assistito )
3 ) il movimento PER la legalizzazione della cannabis,
ANCHE ricreativa
4 ) movimenti, che vogliono garantire i diritti anche agli animali, e cercano di deintensificare gli allevamenti
5 ) sostenere il diritto all' aborto entro il terzo mese ...
6 ) movimenti che mirano al diritto piu' ampio all' ISTRUZIONE ed il miglioramento della stessa
7 ) movimenti, che difendono la 'libera opinione', e vogliono ridurre la CENSURA al MINIMO POSSIBILE 8 ) diritto alla TRASPARENZA
aggiunte più “politiche” che potrebbero emergere
Laicità radicale dello Stato
Libertà di ricerca scientifica
Critica alla sorveglianza digitale
Diritto alla disobbedienza civile
Riforma profonda della giustizia penale
etc.
fate voi le vostre AGGIUNTE, per favore
condividete le vostre proposte
Marietta / gothp1
https://chatgpt.com/share/6952f56e-cac0-8001-ad56-8b36df4323d6
ReplyDelete( ... ) Chiusura (che potresti usare nel post o nel nuovo gruppo)
Questo non è un programma di partito.
È una costellazione di lotte, connesse da un rifiuto comune delle gerarchie opache, della censura preventiva e della delega cieca.
Chi vuole partecipare non deve chiedere permesso per pensare.
Moni Ovadia: "Tutto ciò che temevamo del comunismo si è realizzato col capitalismo"
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wO8mLrp2PJw
Прощание славянки
ReplyDeletehttps://vk.com/audio-2001907620_110907620
Interdisciplinary References of the New Group
ReplyDeleteANTI-COERCIVE PSYCHIATRY
1. Criminal justice and prison conditions
Struggle to improve conditions inside prisons.
Right to work, housing, and social reintegration after prison.
Overcoming a purely punitive logic.
References: restorative justice, critical criminology.
2. Self-determination at the end of life
Right to suicide, if desired.
Possibility of assistance, in full respect of dignity and informed consent.
References: secular bioethics, civil rights.
3. Substance policies
Legalization of cannabis, including recreational use.
Harm reduction and an end to criminalization.
References: public health, individual freedom.
4. Animal rights and transformation of farming
Recognition of fundamental rights for animals.
De-intensification of industrial farming.
Critique of the extractive industrial model.
References: animal ethics, political ecology.
5. Right to abortion
Defense of the right to abortion within the first three months.
Real, free, and unobstructed access to services.
References: secularism, personal rights.
6. Right to education
The broadest possible right to education.
Qualitative improvement of teaching.
Free access to knowledge.
References: critical pedagogy, knowledge as a common good.
7. Right to communication
Right to express oneself and to be heard.
Education in communication, listening, and conflict.
Reduction of linguistic, cultural, and technological barriers.
References: dialogical education, participatory democracy.
8. Freedom of opinion and reduction of censorship
Defense of free expression.
Reduction of censorship to the minimum possible.
Clear distinction between dissent and violence.
References: civil rights, political philosophy.
9. Right to transparency
Transparency in decision-making processes.
Access to information.
Rejection of opaque and hierarchical structures.
References: radical democracy.
10. Radical secularism of the state
Real separation between state, religion, and imposed morality.
Public policies grounded in rights, not dogma.
11. Freedom of scientific research
Defense of free research, even when inconvenient.
Rejection of ideological or economic constraints on knowledge.
12. Critique of digital surveillance
Opposition to mass profiling and control.
Defense of privacy as a political right.
13. Right to civil disobedience
Recognition of civil disobedience as a democratic tool.
Protection of those who practice it non-violently.
14. Deep reform of justice
Critique of punitive justice.
Reduction of imprisonment as an automatic response.
Centrality of responsibility, not revenge.
15. Structural anti-hierarchy
Rejection of pyramidal and invitation-only structures.
Open access to information.
Rotation of roles, no fixed leadership.
16. Real pluralism
Coexistence of even conflicting positions.
No exclusion for uncomfortable opinions.
17. Right to internal dissent
Conflict is not a problem to eliminate.
It is an essential component of democracy.
18. LGB(T)Q rights and sex-based protections
ReplyDeleteProtection of the civil and human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans or queer people, free from discrimination and violence.
Recognition of sex-based rights, including the protection of female-only spaces and categories, particularly in areas such as sport, shelters, prisons, and healthcare.
Defense of freedom of expression, including the right not to be legally compelled to use specific pronouns.
Recognition that protections based on biological sex remain legitimate under the law, and that no individual has a legal right to compel speech from others.
Commitment to open, lawful, and non-coercive debate on these issues.
References: civil rights law, freedom of expression, sex-based equality.
io insieme a ChatGPT
ReplyDeletehttps://gothp1.blogspot.com/2025/02/pagina-28-only-my-new-flag.html
ReplyDelete19. Commitment to a new United Nations
ReplyDeleteCommitment to a New UN, negotiated between the BRICS countries and the G7 states, with few but essential competences.
Guarantee of women’s right to abortion, up to the third month of pregnancy.
Guarantee of the right to assisted suicide.
Guarantee of the right to freedom of expression.
Guarantee of the right to adequate housing, defined as a minimum of 45 square meters per person.
Guarantee of the right to work, with 24 hours per week as the standard working time.
Guarantee of an Unconditional Basic Income, sufficient to cover water, food, and energy.
Active promotion of peace among all nations, including the support of referendums as a democratic tool.
https://blogartists1.blogspot.com/2025/12/blog-post.html
ReplyDelete20. Commitment to direct democracy and a unified global voting system
ReplyDeleteSupport for direct democracy as a core democratic principle.
Establishment of a single electronic voting system, issued and guaranteed by a New United Nations, founded on multilateral treaties between BRICS and G7.
Recognition that only a rebalanced and genuinely supranational institution can ensure common standards, transparency, and public oversight, removing electoral processes from national, economic, or partisan interests.
Use of blockchain technology to guarantee traceability, immutability, and verifiability of votes, without compromising voter anonymity.
Rejection of postal voting, as mail-based systems introduce opaque and vulnerable steps incompatible with a coherent digital democracy.
I consciously chose not to address internal aspects (such as the non-mandatory use of medication), because these require specific, situated, and collective work.
ReplyDeleteMy intention was different: to build a framework.
A framework of external, interdisciplinary, political, and cultural references within which a group that defines itself as ANTI-COERCIVE PSYCHIATRY can recognize itself and find orientation.
In this sense, I did the work of a sociologist:
not writing internal regulations, but clarifying the perimeter, the values, the possible alliances, and the common ground.
The issue of non-coercive medication is already contained in the title and in the overall framework.
The development of internal practices then belongs to those who work daily within the group and its processes.
I have opened the space.
Now that space can be inhabited, discussed, challenged, and developed.
21. Right to Procreation
ReplyDeleteGuarantee of the right to have children, with a socially supported limit of up to two children per person or per family, ensuring sustainability, equality of opportunity, and the well-being of future generations.
The value of a life is not subject to prior evaluation; what must be assessed is the responsibility of society to guarantee autonomy and dignity, including in the presence of disability