

Infrastructure as Control feat. Andrew
19 snips Aug 11, 2025
Andrew Sage, a thinker on infrastructure and its societal implications, joins James to explore how both physical and digital infrastructures act as systems of control. They discuss the profound impact of infrastructure on daily life and personal freedoms, drawing connections between historical colonialism and modern surveillance. The conversation also highlights inequality in Rwanda and the importance of community resilience in urban design. They emphasize the strength of collective action in reclaiming personal spaces and fostering empowerment within marginalized communities.
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Infrastructure Shapes Daily Choices
- Infrastructure constrains how people live, work, and move.
- James Stout notes labor and borders limit participation in mutual aid.
Infrastructure Built For Extraction
- Colonial transport networks prioritized moving resources to ports, not serving locals.
- Andrew Sage highlights railways, roads and ports designed for imperial extraction.
Chinese Roads Vs Village Dirt Tracks
- James Stout contrasts fast 'Chinese roads' built to mines with immersive dirt-road travel.
- He values human interaction over speed when traveling.