A Better World
is Possible

The working class must build its own hegemony. Kolektif Bertiga is a space for dialectical thinking rooted in struggle and the principles of common good. Here we think, write and dialogue in service of the construction of our shared project and vision.

We engage with ecology, feminism, and the common good through the lens of collective liberation. Beyond internet noise, toward a future we build together.

Our Rule of Three

🌍

Common Good

The common good as a weapon of the people: every idea must strengthen working-class solidarity, social justice, and a public sphere free from exploitation.

🌱

Environmentalism

The climate crisis is a crisis of capital. We discuss ecology from the ground up—climate justice, land rights, and sustainable life beyond extractivism.

⚧️

Feminism

Feminism is class struggle. Every conversation is gender-conscious, anti-patriarchal, and rooted in the fight against all hierarchies.

Core Collective

IbO

Ibu Ong

She/They

Writes on dialectics, philosophy, history, and political economy. Her work explores the digital economy, Marxist feminism, and the intersection of dialectical materialism with modern science, from quantum mechanics to Hegel and geopolitics.

YWJ

Yu Wu-Jin

He/It

Examines the intersections of disability, queerness, fatphobia, psychology, and Marxism. He transforms online discourse into empathetic, structural action that moves beyond criticism to wrestle power and build real support for disabled people.

KCG

Koecing

He/They

Critical of internet discourse that blames individuals rather than systems. Rooted in the Dialectics of Nature, they see the exploitation of the earth as inseparable from the oppression of all people. A believer in radical love, intolerant of hate, refusing passivity. For Koecing, science and indigenous wisdom are not opposed: both are living knowledges rooted in evidence and curiosity, and spirituality deserves serious investigation. Dialectics is not a theory but the shape of life itself.

— plus guest contributors and comrades in discourse —

Latest Discourse

Full Archive →