feat(web): flatten frontmatter — drop slug, flat tags/cats, auto-bump updatedDate [skip ci]
diff --git a/content/pages/lore.md b/content/pages/lore.md index 455c83d..2b7c03b 100644 --- a/content/pages/lore.md +++ b/content/pages/lore.md @@ -1,6 +1,5 @@ --- title: "The lore" -slug: lore updatedDate: 2026-05-13T09:37:29.000Z draft: false legacy_wp_id: 17012feat(web): full posts+pages sync, browseable UI, curated pages allowlist
diff --git a/content/pages/lore.md b/content/pages/lore.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..455c83d --- /dev/null +++ b/content/pages/lore.md @@ -0,0 +1,52 @@ +--- +title: "The lore" +slug: lore +updatedDate: 2026-05-13T09:37:29.000Z +draft: false +legacy_wp_id: 17012 +--- +## SLIST Lore – The Short Version + +Five cancel wars. Two cities. The community defended SLIST every time, before there was money in it. + +* * * + +_Five cancel wars. Two cities. One operator left standing._ + +SLIST has been the target of organized cancellation campaigns five separate times — three in CDMX, two in NYC. Every one of them grew the project. The pattern is consistent enough that controversy now reads as a leading indicator of momentum. + +## The first defense. + +2022, CDMX. Someone from New York flew in and tried to cancel SLIST over a series of shitposts. The community responded without being asked — defended the project, ran her career into the ground for a year. That was the moment the brand stopped being one person’s blog and started being a community. It happened a year before there was any commercial money in it. + +That loyalty is what everything is built on. The community defended SLIST before SLIST ever made a dollar. + +## The Chris incident.Diff truncated (59 lines total). View full commit on GitHub →