They want you broke, dependent, and drowning in Amazon boxes. So fix it. Literally. Repair culture is radical culture. Every time you fix a toaster, sew up a tear, or resuscitate a busted bike, you’re flipping the bird to capitalist planned obsolescence and fascist dependence systems. You’re keeping tools in community hands, not in a landfill—or in some defense contractor’s supply chain.
Start a neighborhood repair brigade. Host a pop-up Fix-It Clinic. Become the local legend who sharpens scissors and repairs boots like a badass.
This guide shows you how to:
- Start a community repair collective
- Host a “Don’t Buy It, Fix It” night
- Learn to fix tech, textiles, tools—and help your neighbors do the same
- Use repair culture as a front for mutual aid and underground resistance prep (tool libraries, secure supply sharing, etc.)
- Starve the capitalist beast by reducing your need to buy their junk
Your resistance doesn’t have to be loud to be lethal. Sometimes, it’s a sewing machine. Or a soldering iron. Or a $5 wrench and a lot of nerve.
🛠️ How to Build a Repair Crew and Wreck the Waste Machin
1. Start with Skills and Tools You Already Have
- Can you sew? Sharpen knives? Fix bikes? Replace zippers? You’re already dangerous.
- Inventory your tools (needles, screwdrivers, soldering irons, etc.). Borrow what you don’t have.
2. Find Your Repair Rebels
- Ask around: neighbors, coworkers, friends, your local mutual aid crew.
- Look for folks with skills in mending, electronics, carpentry, or general fix-it genius.
- Host a potluck to recruit. (Yes, bribe them with snacks.)
3. Host a DIY Repair Night or Fix-It Pop-Up
- Pick a park, church basement, or front yard.
- Bring signage that says: “Fix it, Don’t Buy It,” or “Capitalism Broke It, We Fixed It.”
- Offer to fix clothing, appliances, tech, or bikes. Encourage bartering or donations, not money.
4. Set Up a Repair Library or Tool Share
- Create a lending hub of tools and manuals. Label things clearly and track what’s borrowed.
- Pair tools with people willing to teach others how to use them.
5. Use It as a Stealth Mutual Aid Node
- While fixing a lamp, you can also hand out protest flyers, medical kits, or burner phone tips.
- Build community trust and prep the ground for future resistance ops.
6. Spread the Word
- Use encrypted group chats or flyer drops (not Instagram) to announce pop-ups.
- Document repairs anonymously. Share how-to guides with your network.
7. Sabotage Capitalism (Politely)
- Offer free or sliding-scale repairs in areas targeted by gentrification or exploitation.
- Deny the consumer system its profits and dependencies—one fixed toaster at a time.

Today’s To-Do List:
- 🛠️ Fix something instead of replacing it.
- 🧰 Find a local repair collective or start one with a friend.
- 🧵 Offer free sewing/mending at your next protest, town hall, or community event.
- 🔌 Download repair manuals before they vanish (iFixit is a goldmine).
- 💣 Boycott: Amazon (again and always). Fix it instead.
- 🪧 Protest/Event: Repair Café NYC (today at 2pm), check local listings for more.
Resistance Kitty says:
Build a repair crew, and you’re building a resistance cell. Every fixed bike is one they can’t track. Every shared tool is one less dollar for the machine. Stitch. Solder. Sabotage. Meow.
Source List:
- https://ifixit.com/
- https://repaircafe.org/en/
- https://thedemlabs.org/2025/05/16/how-to-stop-hackers-from-reading-your-private-messages-encrypt-them-with-makeitprivate-org/