

I advocate for a radical shift in how we treat surplus, waste, and digital resources. Freeganism—especially food-sharing models like those at Stanmer Wellbeing Gardens—shows how community nourishment can thrive without financial gatekeeping. I support practices that rescue, redistribute, and regenerate: from gleaned produce to shared harvests, from repaired tech to ethical I.T resell softwares.
I stand with initiatives like Freecycle, Freegle, and community-led I.T reuse hubs that turn giveaways into lifelines and discarded devices into tools for equity. These systems work because they’re direct, transparent, and rooted in care—not profit. I reject bureaucratic procedures that delay and exclude. Access should never hinge on paperwork and red tape.
My stance is clear: not-for-profit, barrier-free collaboration must take precedence over profit-driven models. Waste is not inevitable—it’s a design flaw I refuse to normalize. I choose redistribution, repair, and inclusive access as acts of resistance, regeneration, and solidarity.