Iron West - I Didn’t Turn This Way - Gritty Dark Country Groove
I Didn’t Turn This Way is a gritty dark country groove about becoming harder after being pushed too far.
This song tells a human story of betrayal, survival, and the quiet strength that comes from learning life’s hard rules.
Driven by a steady stomp rhythm, raw male vocals, and a stripped-down outlaw country sound, this track feels real and lived-in - made for late-night drives, empty bars, and anyone who’s been forced to toughen up just to stay standing.
🔥 Music by: IRON WEST
🔥 Video by: IRON WEST
🎵 Genre: Dark Country / Outlaw Country / Gritty Groove
If you’re searching for dark country music, gritty outlaw songs, country groove tracks, or raw western storytelling with real emotion, this song will speak to you.
Turn it up, feel the rhythm, and let the truth sit heavy.



doodoo_wizard
in reply to Adeptus_Obsoletus • • •Fair warning, if you apply enough scrutiny to any big distribution you’ll find tons of stuff like this.
Theres some awesome schizo timecube esque website that documents Debian (my chosen distro) mess in great detail. I’ll edit in the url if I can find it.
E: found it: Debian History Harassment & Abuse culture evolution
If you can’t be a truther about something you’ll lie for anything I guess
Debian History Harassment & Abuse culture evolution
danielpocock.comDigitalDilemma
in reply to doodoo_wizard • • •Pietroinversilia
in reply to Adeptus_Obsoletus • • •Adeptus_Obsoletus
Unknown parent • • •Oh, yeah, I forgot to add in the main post that I've researched that too. I know about FESCo and I understand what you're saying about it being kind of a counter-weight to Red Hat. But there is a pretty big problem:
Out of 9 current FESCo board members, 6 are Red Hat employees, one of them is an ex-Red Hat employee, which leaves only 2 members that are not affiliated with Red Hat. Now, I understand that there's probably not some big conspiracy there, I assume it's just that their job at RH allows them to work on Fedora a lot more than anyone else, and in turn, they're chosen for the board because their contributions will usually be very noticeable. But at the end of the day, I think there is a conflict of interest there. When faced with a heavy choice, do you stand with your employer who puts food on your table or a community of strangers that doesn't really give you real life benefits?
Zorsith
in reply to Adeptus_Obsoletus • • •doodoo_wizard
in reply to Adeptus_Obsoletus • • •After taking some time to think, it’s worthwhile to remember that basically everything we think of as modern open source happened in a time of unipolar global hegemony with the express approval of that hegemony.
Open source as we know it and experience it today likely cannot exist in a time of real contestation over the levers of power in the world and you probably shouldn’t make the mistake of voting with your dollars or time in that contest. Any money or time that you find sloshing around is probably better spent elsewhere preparing yourself for the outcome of that contest rather than cheering or contributing in it.
DigitalDilemma
in reply to Adeptus_Obsoletus • • •I agree - and historically they have led innovation is truly groundbreaking ways, but my personal view is that those glory days are a long way in the past now. Whilst they do still do some good work for FOSS, the purchase by IBM has in my view, changed objectives. To me, Red Hat has changed from being a profit making company that existed to support foss projects, to a subsidiary running foss projects to support a profit making company.
IBM don't buy companies to make the world a better place.
Alex
in reply to Adeptus_Obsoletus • • •When it comes to export controls and sanctioned entities it doesn't really matter what Red Hat would like to do - they have to comply with the law in the jurisdictions they work in. Even if it was purely a community project individual contributors face a similar liability if based in those jurisdictions.
When it comes to sanction lists there is a fair amount of commonalty between the US and Europe. This is really something to complain to government about.