You could always fork them. That's one of the wonderful things about Linux and FOSS. Straight copy the code to a new project. That may be beyond your current skill set but it's always an option.
I mean you only have three paths really. Distro-hop until you find something else. Start with a pre-built like mint or fedora and make it what you want or build from scratch.
I distro hopped for a long time, then ended up going through the basic arch install one weekend and omg it's easy now with their archinstall script, I've gotten lazy and just use Fedora.
Tldr: I suggest investing the time to do the arch install on your side machine just as a learning experience, particularly by hand and without the script. It will be invaluable to you not just as a Linux user but as a computer user. Even if you end up on another OS you'll be more capable and comfortable with the terminal. I really can't emphasize how useful that will be and what doors it may unlock for you.
Small example is all the poorly written yet functional bash scripts I write for myself. How I used wget -r to scrape my university's website and made a database of old solutions to homework and exams for myself.
Well hopefully Khanna and Massie can squash this on the house floor. At minimum we all see whose political careers should be cut short. I think by now it's pretty bipartisan how much Americans dislike the influence of Israel over American politics. If it was the Kremlin or Bejing with this much influence I think people could better react.