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#humanconnection

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Now in College, #LudditeTeens Still Don’t Want Your Likes

Three years after starting a club meant to fight #SocialMedia’s grip on young people, many original members are holding firm and gaining new converts.

By Alex Vadukul
Jan. 30, 2025

"Biruk Watling, a college sophomore wearing a baggy coat and purple fingerless gloves, walked the chilly campus of Temple University in #Philadelphia on a recent afternoon to recruit new members to her club.
She taped a flier to a pole: '#JoinTheLudditeClub For #MeaningfulConnections.' Down the block, she posted another one: 'Do You Desire a Healthier Relationship With Technology, Especially Social Media? The Luddite Club Welcomes You and Your Ideas.'

"When a student approached, Ms. Watling dove into her pitch.

"'Our club promotes #ConsciousConsumption of #technology,' she said. 'We’re for #HumanConnection. I’m one of the first members of the original Luddite Club in #Brooklyn. Now I’m trying to start it in #Philly.

"She pulled out a #FlipPhone, mystifying her recruit.

"'We use these,' she said. 'This has been the most freeing experience of my life.'
If Ms. Watling had a missionary’s zeal, it was because she wasn’t just promoting a student club, but an approach to modern life that profoundly changed her two years ago, when she helped form the Luddite Club as a high school student in New York.

"But that was then, back when things were simpler, before she had embarked on the more independent life of a college student and found herself having to navigate QR codes, two-factor-identification logins, dating apps and other digital staples of campus life.

"The #LudditeClub was the subject of an article I wrote in 2022 — a story that, ironically, went viral. It told of how a group of teenage tech skeptics from Edward R. Murrow High School in Brooklyn and a few other schools in the city gathered on weekends in Prospect Park to enjoy some time together away from the machine.

"They #sketched and #painted side by side. They read quietly, favoring works by #Dostoyevsky, #Kerouac and #Vonnegut. They sat on logs and groused about how #TikTok was dumbing down their generation. Their flip phones were decorated with stickers and nail polish.

"Readers inspired by their message responded in hundreds of emails and comments. Reporters from Germany, Brazil, Japan and elsewhere flooded my inbox, asking me how to reach these students who were so hard to track down online. Snarky Reddit threads and think pieces sprouted. #RalphNader endorsed the club in an opinion essay, writing: 'This is a rebellion that needs support and diffusion.'"

Read more:
nytimes.com/2025/01/30/style/l

Archived version:
archive.ph/
#SolarPunkSunday #Nature #NeoLuddite #Luddites #LessScreenTime #MoreBoardGames #MoreGreenTime #MoreOutdoorTime #FlipPhones #MoreBooks #ResistTheMachine

The New York Times · Luddite Teens Still Don’t Want Your LikesBy Alex Vadukul

1997 Mystery and Reflection in a Cloudy Landscape

The painting features two main subjects, one male dressed in a dark suit holding hands with another person partially obscured by a cloud.
A woman stands beside them, her figure emerging from the same white expanse as they appear to be walking hand-in-hand into an open field under a blue sky dotted with fluffy clouds.

nocontext.loener.nl/fullpage/0

Save the Dates! Aug 9th: opening night show of our 10 year anniversary exhibition in Projektraum at Kunstquartier Bethanien.

Weekend workshops led by lovely humans on spatial.js and coding in VR, participatory performance involving kite making and flying, and making art about politics and peace in these complicated times. Plus scheduled daily screams of AAAAAA! and much more.

I'm sending this to you...yes you!

We are all connected, and this song (written by Erika Lloyd and performed here by the world-famous ensemble Chanticleer) really makes me feel that connection deeply. I hope it makes you feel it too!
The soloist, Casey Breves, has one of the most beautiful voices I have ever heard.
Enjoy!

CHANTICLEER: Cells Planets
youtube.com/watch?v=sl12ZXZeqa

The world is full of amazing people, immersed in their lives and passions. You often won't notice them because they aren't interested in being noticed. But when you interact with them, you'll be enriched on a human level. You won't notice them amid the frantic noise of those who only want to be seen; they remain in composed silence, engaging only when there is something beautiful and constructive to offer.