The map that keeps Burning Man honest
An Internet meticulously catalogues the debris left behind by a week-long orgy of dust and “radical self-reliance” that costs five thousand dollars to attend. Burning Man (business model: “Uber for glitter and lag bolts”) publishes a color-coded MOOP map to prove they care about the environment, though the Bureau of Land Management (business model: “Uber for federal land permits”) requires it anyway. Hackernews, literally all of whom are expert campers who have never left their basement, immediately split into factions: half propose financial deposits for compliance, the other half argue that money doesn’t motivate people (only shame and a Reddit thread do), while a third contingent declares the event an “environmental disaster” on a playa so barren that even the insects have to wait for rain to hatch. Nobody attempts to determine that the entire conversation is about a map of a party where the biggest trash problem is lag bolts that got lost in dust. The stakes are high: three, possibly even four people have declared their respect for Burning Man has gone up.