In that other thread you created which @BobTheFisherman linked, I clearly explained the current state of Linux on an Apple Silicon Mac. Clearly you don't trust us to provide accurate information....I would have included links to the statements I made, but you made it abundantly clear in that other post you did not want any links. Clearly you don't want to do any searching for answers on your own even when someone gives you actual items to use in that search.
Just to reiterate what I wrote in that other post, this time trying to keep it a bit simpler.....AFAIK, there is currently no Linux distribution compatible with an Apple Silicon Mac for booting on bare metal. The closest thing to booting on bare metal on an Apple Silicon Mac is Asahi Linux which is no more than a barebones boot disk for the Asahi developers to develop & test the drivers they are developing for Apple Silicon Macs. Those same developers only recently announced they were going to use Fedora Core as a base for a full blown Linux OS for Apple Silicon Macs so that regular apps will be available for people. I would provide links, but I know how you don't want any links.
What you want doesn't exist at this time with Apple hardware AFAIK. You need to find the hardware which is actually compatible with Linux. Apple hardware since 2016 has had very poor Linux support. It usually takes years before Linux support becomes usable on new hardware anyway.