
In short
- Boris Turk
- Permaculture gardener
- Admirer of wild men and women
- Free spirit – advocate of genuine anarchist, classless, and stateless social organization (in small, medium, and larger circles)
- Bachelor of Computer Science and Informatics (UN)
- professional software developer
- Born in 1984



Life Principles
I consider myself a “socialization error” (instead of strengthening monopolies, I strive for independence, local self-sufficiency, and mutual cooperation). I have self-reformed into an individual with moral responsibility who “does not care what others think” when their actions go against the ecosystem but instead resists wisely.
Example of resistance: You will never see me eating or even tasting food products that contain eggs from battery farming, as such hens are kept in cages of about 40 x 40 cm, which is completely unnatural and unethical.
If food packaging does not state that the contained eggs are free-range, I do not eat them. This type of resistance is called a boycott.
I appreciate efforts and work aimed at the common good.

If I could choose, I would never put money into a pension fund because I do not intend to retire. Instead of pensions, I would prefer to invest in sustainable power plants (e.g., solar) and, in doing so, create jobs or additional income for others.
I find construction work much more meaningful than jobs that merely “move money around.”
Tens of thousands of living species on Earth are threatened with extinction. This represents several dozen percent of the species recorded by www.iuncredlist.org.
Knowledge of how to live in harmony with nature is essential for long-term survival. This knowledge should be integrated into everyday life. That is why my mission is to acquire it, live it, and offer it to others for free, reaching as many people as possible within my capabilities. We are humans—we are creators when we choose to be.
We should cultivate a collective awareness that we have the power to restore harmony, which has been violently discarded in favor of distorted consumerist practices within a system where economy has been replaced by greedy hrematism.
My Motives
The forms of independence I strive for:
- Food independence (growing all organic food for oneself).
- Energy independence (generating all necessary energy in an environmentally friendly way).
- Independence from receiving praise/desires/validation from others (accepting these things for learning values, not as “nourishment”).
- Independence from relationships (engaging in relationships to build more effectively, not because a specific relationship is necessary for survival/happiness).
- Independence from drugs (including prescription medicines from pharmacies).
This does not mean being unaffected by these things, but rather being able to live normally without them.
It means: “If I live with it, it’s fine, and if I live without it, it’s just as fine.”
That is true independence. At the same time, I must not become dependent on the desire to be independent.
I want to create and support things that I find meaningful.
I see no meaning in financing a system that makes people dependent, unhealthy, unhappy, and infertile.
In the world, I wish for less slavery as a product of belief in authority.
Socializing and Free Time
I enjoy the company of people who, through love, strive to strengthen power, understanding, solidarity, focus, peace, unwavering conflict resolution, independence, maturity, intelligence…
It is very important to me that all of this comes through love, as I see it as a unifying force, without which a community often falls apart, and individuals hinder each other in their actions.
Some activities that entertain/relax me and that I enjoy doing:
- Programming & designing
- Slacklining & juggling
- Tai chi
- Riding a unicycle
- Drumming & guitar
- Running (an excellent example is the Obstacle Run at Pokljuka)
- Gymnastics & dance
- Permaculture & gardening (My Eco Garden 2014)
- Hiking in places like these:
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