Endeavors O’ Interest
(“I will fight until I have died, or all my enemies are allies.” -Streetlight Manifesto)
We strongly believe that true accountability means accepting even conflicts we’ve unknowingly fostered—because each one represents a chance to alleviate someone’s suffering. And virtually every instance yields unimaginable understanding.
So while we know of no foes (aside from ideologies), any that emerged would be considered “allies in the making.”
It’s with this spirit that we express our efforts in raw form: harmony on Earth. Not global peace clinging to irrational hopes. Actual harmony requires arguments to play out regularly—it’s how we figure shit out. Nor are we hoping to protect every species from extinction. Dying off allows us to remain sabre-tooth tiger-free, which is an arguably HUGE win for humanity. (Note: if your political party supports sabre-tooth-related issues, you have much to consider immediately. Problematically guaranteed.)
And no, kumbaya isn’t in our repertoire, alongside anything cult-conducive or liberally-conservating. It isn’t in anyone’s interests for someone to disingenuously care for another person or group. That shit should be intentional all the way through.
So what do we mean by harmony? Culture-preserving existences that provide a range of engagement. Simple. Helpful. Keeps us from becoming what we detest—in under ten words.
Here’s the thing: our disagreements identify our misunderstandings. Conflicts can be destructive, constructive, or anything between—which is precisely why there’s reason to hope for a better tomorrow. Not “hoping for the best and expecting the worst” (great for never dating again and End of Days scenarios). N
Not faith either, because hope isn’t absent—it’s informed. Remember how your best friendships were made? Usually through some gloriously messy clash that forced mutual understanding. That’s what we’re building toward here.
This is not about political fiascos or hidden agendas. Not even patriotic loyalty. Values and respect aren’t rational to expect anywhere, yet they arise from the most unexpected clusterfucks. So no, we aren’t on “your specific side”—how could we be? Loyalty should be earned, respect requires healthy egos, and we can only be clear in our aim while redundantly evaluating our intentions.
But sincerely: if you ever feel our endeavors create or risk creating unnecessary suffering, tell us. Responsibility requires awareness, which dependably arrives after capacity but before identification.
The Practical Stuff:
We organize our work into two categories:
1. Upcoming Projects – What we’re actively developing
2. Released and Ready Projects – These are as far as we are capable to take them, either due to skill, time constraints or wanting to keep it simplistic for any who wish to use can more easily make it their own.(Example: The Franklin Construct, Open Source Hoverboard Prototype!.)
The archive matters because every lesson humans learn gets dangerous the moment we bury it. We’re not interested in misguided treasure hunts that promise ends without providing means. Everything stays accessible because context creates understanding, and understanding prevents repetition of avoidable, and generally unnecessary, suffering.
Upcoming Endeavors/Currently in Development
These are currently in the works and while we may have limited information the projects listed below have been
The Draw
Voiced By: Christopher J. Perger, Volunteer Steward & Founder of Liberty Shore
Release Date: January 1st, 2026
The Draw was originally developed as a prequel to the three-part series Epically Speaking in Ethical Disproportions. Right away on page one, the series dives into territory that made it clear readers might need some preparation—specifically, an understanding of why we aren’t bashing politicians or lashing out divisively the way the expected approach has become when addressing America’s troubling current situation.
What’s more, it became clear that some background and context would help establish something critical: everything presented comes from a place of sincere compassion and extended concern. There is nothing lacking sincerity, and everything stripped of expectation.
I’ve fought my battles and found nothing to remain. I let go of the self-doubting, the desperation in identification, and the endless expectations—of others and myself—that I hadn’t even realized I was carrying. I thought very clearly: when we’re born, the doctor doesn’t slap your ass to get you breathing and then say, “Expect your friends and family to act the way you need them to,” or “Immorality shouldn’t exist in this nation, so don’t expect it.” If you think about it, how many things pertaining to society—or even our private lives—have proven to be dependably expectable? Now consider that everyone operates under the impression that respect is earned… literally meaning, “Everybody in the world I don’t know doesn’t deserve my respect… but if they can do what I can’t, and respect me enough while I judge them unfairly, and if they aren’t like half the Americans I politically oppose… just maybe…”
So in the interest of reaching out to anybody in this social climate, The Draw was voiced.
“This prologue—The Draw—and the three Trips that follow it through this triptych—Epically Speaking in Ethical Disproportions—aren’t here to win an argument. Nor do they have the potential to be used for politically aggressive purposes.
They’re here to name the thing almost no one ever named for you:
You were never taught how to belong without collapsing or conquering.
You were never given a shared starting point for:
- how to sit with your own pain without turning it into a weapon
- how to define values that aren’t just handed down by a group
- how to disagree without needing the other person annihilated
- how to take a break in solitude without vanishing into isolation
- how to actively listen with genuine interest for society’s wellbeing
In the absence of that training, a lot of people did what you would expect social creatures in pain to do:
They fused their sense of self to parties, ideologies, identities, or influencers.
They let television and timelines tell them who the “good people” are.
They learned to say “the system is broken” while still letting the same emotional patterns run their lives.
This project is not here to shame you for that.
If anything, it’s here to say: of course. Of course that happened. How else was this supposed to go, if nobody ever showed us another option?”
Epically Speaking in Ethical Disproportions
Voiced By: Christopher J. Perger, Volunteer Steward & Founder of Liberty Shore
Release Date: January 1st, 2026
Modern civilization rests on three promises that have been twisted into their opposites. Freedom detached from empathy became sanctioned indifference. Deserving replaced compassion with a hierarchy of suffering. Belonging collapsed when we confused accountability with blame.
This three-part triptych traces how these fundamental values—the roots of human dignity—became roots of unnecessary suffering instead. Not because collapse is inevitable when societies grow large, but because we’ve mistaken patterns for inevitability and performance for genuine care.
Trip 1: Credit-Lined Freedom diagnoses how freedom became license—the right to ignore rather than the capacity to flourish. Sharp, exposing, but never despairing, it reveals the spectacle machine that replaced substance with theater.
Trip 2: Conditional Deserving explores how deserving became entitlement—how we built ledgers of pain and called it justice, weaponizing vulnerability while abandoning those who needed help most. Instead of shoving ones own suffering at others to prove credibility from unique sorrow it asks the only question that even matters: Will helping reduce suffering?
Trip 3: Patriotic Belonging provides the complete toolkit for repair. Through frameworks like the U-A-P accountability equation and practices developed by six children in a treehouse who have grown up in this third installment, it demonstrates that belonging-with-accountability makes both freedom and deserving sustainable.
This isn’t another autopsy of what’s broken. It’s a practical guide to what’s possible when we stop performing empathy and start practicing it— when we recognize that dignity isn’t individualized entitlement but our collective dependency on each other.
The work is for anyone exhausted by division and hungry for repair. Not perfect. Never finished. Always necessary. Always possible.
“Who Cares More?!?” (working title)
Created by: Christopher J. Perger
Release Date: TBD
Details aren’t available aside this: Media/Skit To Come!
“Mutually Worked” (working title)
Created by: TBD,
Release Date: TBD
In short, this project is to be a new form of social media platform that’s designed to allow people within similar/same job titles to reach out to each other, allowing geographic, cultural and local specificities to be not limiting to peers in mutual efforts for society but instead explorable, if not also unifying without any form of Union to reap the benefits of communal potential.
Archived Endeavors
An unexpected perk of building Liberty Shore is what happens when you stop inventorying what’s broken and start asking what could work. The mind flips into builder mode, and possibility finally meets real potential. In that space, the durable ideals we drifted from—buried under performative politics, ratings-chasing news, and emotion-mining ads—come back into view and feel workable again.
The Official 10-Article Series
In short… it all started here. These 10 articles are the aspect exclusively developed with the US of A in mind. Partisanship and harmful causes are not practiced (as is always the hope to help us sleep at night!)