Isaidub — Tremors
I call them tremors because they are felt more than they are seen. You notice them not in the dramatic aftermath but in the new choices that follow: the projects you stop defending, the people you choose to call, the cities you imagine living in. Each tremor is small enough to be dismissed and consequential enough that, left unchecked, it aggregates into a life you no longer recognize.
If you are looking through a dubbed collection, you might find several sequels. Here is how they generally rank according to reviewers from Tremors (1990): The original and undisputed best. Tremors 2: Aftershocks (1996): tremors isaidub
But the ground never fully stabilizes.
— iSaidub
isaidub has survived for over a decade by exploiting a simple geological truth: the internet’s tectonic plates are always shifting. Every time authorities block one domain, the site’s operators—rumored to be based in a country with lax cyber laws—release a new IP address. They use reverse proxies, VPNs, and peer-to-peer caches. I call them tremors because they are felt