Red Nerd Productions

Intrepid Innovation


Disclaimer:

All Products shown on this site are the property of Red Nerd Productions LLC. Anything written is a public idea once it's out there. Run with it. Just hopefully give me a citation or a statement of thanks. Or, if you can afford it, please buy one of my products and give it a good review. 


Spirit Statement:

Our products are built to be safe. We don't take your information, so we can't sell it. 


Vanity Statement:

Still never had anyone reach out to be my agent. Shocking. 


Surplus Statement:

I read The Moneyless Manifesto, by Mark Boyle, which gave me the idea of the surplus mentality. One of the best thoughts I've ever been given. A lot of economics is a focus on scarcity. Surplus economics are as follows: since I use businesses and platforms the way they are intended, when I finally hit my tipping point of success, so many additional companies will profit. Amazon will profit from every novel and essay sale or Twitch sub. Shopify profits from every merch sale. Apple profits from every app sale. Google profits from every view and cloud hit(app sale). Meta, X, TikTok, Snap, and all social media my content is shared on, will also profit. Any media company that discusses my work will profit. And when I tour, the venues will profit while the towns, cities, and states rake in tax revenue. All the people I will hire will also consume and create their own spiderwebs of influence and surplus. The government taxes every transaction to enforce their will... (Taxation is Theft). But, when my empire hits; and it all starts selling as a compounding ecosystem of goofiness, they'll all share in my success. That is the surplus mentality. 


Christianity Statement: 

My interpretation of Christianity has always been one of surplus. Tim Tebow talks of giving. He gives his time, energy, and example. Pretty effing Christlike. But, I imagine Jesus would come back as a girl to ensure women get rights and stuff. Taylor Swift? Tim Tebow is someone whose example I follow. Sadly, many Christians take from those around them. I saw a video describing an exorcism and it just seemed like... Many Christians just ask for donations. That's not giving. 

Anyways, Christianity is a lot like Buddhism to me. The world is suffering and we can hopefully make it better to achieve a higher plane of existence both in this world and the next. However, there's also a lot of not-sufferring in this world too. So, you know, stop and smell the roses? If you treat the area around you well, hopefully others will as well, and compounding Good happens. The converse is also true, as can be see from the rise of bad groups. Everyone gets shit on. Sadly, some people harm innocents to get back at those who harmed them previously. The tragedy of Bill Gates or Magua from The Last Of The Mohicans (I haven't read the book yet). 

But, Buddha believed that life was suffering, which is what Christians would call hell. So, there's a logic that we're in hell. And, if you hear that our global leadership aren't the best people, there's some extra merit to it. When every path to success involves a perversion, seems like hell. A Christian would just call that a target rich environment. You mean you don't even have to go on a Mormon mission trip? 

However, You can only control yourself. So, if you aren't bad to yourself, life will be mostly good. If entire communities embody that, great things happen. However, some people will look at a great thing, see its 1 flaw, and only see the flaw as a reason for excommunication. That begins that cycle of punishment. Again, just be good and kind and add value, and surround yourself with the same. Being, and surrounding yourself with the opposite, sounds like a terrible way to live. 

Christianity was always just an economically intelligent way to live. It's the opposite of a prisoner's dilemma. And, if you look at the rules, they're really easy... you can even be a dick and still be Good! It's not even about God, that's just a bonus. 


Thank you for reading.