• @empireOfLove
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    741 year ago

    can’t wait to see the hexbear response to this one

    • PugJesus
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      571 year ago

      Hexbear: [image of a pig pooping on its own balls]

      Truly, walking in the shoes of Marx and Engels. Such eloquence.

    • @RichCaffeineFlavor@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      They’re never going to be able to argue Stalin didn’t send firing squads to murder the Spanish revolutionaries. After seeing this meme they’d be crazy to try.

      • @Akasazh@feddit.nl
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        191 year ago

        The Spanish Civil War is a bit weird in nomenclature, though. The ‘revolutionaries’ were the fascist branches of the military and monarchists, who were mad at the leftist elected governement.

        Usually revolutionaries aren’t conservatives, but in the Spanish Civil War they were. Both Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin jumped at the chance to test out their offensive capabilities and sent their armies there. And it was a bloody affair where both parties slaughtered civil parties.

        But Russia, for once, supported the democratically elected party in this war.

        I’m not affiliated with the tankies and hate the fables they spin, but as an historian this one point really needed some context.

        • PugJesus
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          81 year ago

          But Russia, for once, supported the democratically elected party in this war.

          Man, that’s not even close to how it went down. The Soviet-supported PCE was all about infighting and sabotaging other members of the Republicans for not bootlicking Stalin enough.

        • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          The ‘revolutionaries’ were the fascist branches of the military and monarchists

          I mean, can it really be called any kind of “revolt,” then? It’s essentially just a coup that went south and spun into a civil war thanks to the CNT-FAI’s intelligence networks.

          • @Akasazh@feddit.nl
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            1 year ago

            Aside from massive military ‘aid’ there was between 2000-3000 Russian millitary personel active in Spain during the war.

            • @RichCaffeineFlavor@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              So many words to say you were lying but want it to count as truth. Putting the Soviet Union in the same line as the fascist forces that sent ~30 times the number of people. If you’re an historian then you know you’re being a slimy little shit lying about that, and if you’re not an historian (and it doesn’t seem like you are frankly) you’re a slimy little shit for lying about that. Scare quotes around ‘aid’. Absolutely deranged.

              Not that you’ve stopped lying, equivocating ‘military personnel’ as troops when even wikipedia won’t call them that.

                • @RichCaffeineFlavor@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Bye Felicia

                  Guess we’ll never witness your mental alchemy that turns sending ‘aid’ to the republicans into putting them in front of a firing squad as the meme implies.

                  Anticommunists never actually have to have a coherent though though lol

              • Cethin
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                11 year ago

                Who hurt you? Do you need to talk about it?

    • Urist
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      71 year ago

      Are the hexbears in the room with you right now?

      • @YeetPics@mander.xyz
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        131 year ago

        No, they were defederated. Although I’m sure many of them have alt accounts here because trolls love to troll and get sad when you exile them.

        • Urist
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          21 year ago

          I get it.

          They’re completely irrelevant for people like you and me, though. I don’t worry about who’s trolling me (tbh, haven’t been trolled on lemmy yet), and I don’t let them live rent free in my mind. They’re not politically important, they’re small, they’re isolated.

          Politically, I belong in the group in the meme with our backs against the wall. This weird fixation on hexbear feels like a sort of online red scare. I know full well I’ll be called a communist and grouped in with the tankies by 99% of people who don’t post on places like lemmy. Most people don’t distinguish between trade unionists and anarchists, and stalinists/maoists.

          • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            If Trump gets elected again, I don’t think he’s gonna differentiate between tankies, anarchists, socialists, Marxists, liberals, etc. if you are left of him, it’s the wall. But these “leftists” keep shadow-boxing an imaginary enemy. Kinda Sus.

          • @YeetPics@mander.xyz
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            11 year ago

            Idk, I see comments from a group calling for nuking a hemisphere of the planet almost daily there to eradicate groups based on skin color and political beliefs.

            ‘Red scare’ is a bullshit term when the comments are still there for anyone to see. It’s the difference between a storm watch and a storm warning.

            I have 0 patience for violent authoritarians, be they liberal, conservative, communist, white or brown or black. You shouldn’t either, be better.

            • Urist
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              11 year ago

              They aren’t the only internet echo chamber. I feel no need to wring my hands over the fact they exist. They have no influence over me, my instance is defederated from them, just like lemmy.world. And, it’s not like they’re out there banning books and participating in local elections, like other groups are. I see no likely future where they can do anything but shitpost.

              If you feel like you’re improving the world by heading over there and reading distressing stuff, I’m not going to stop you, buddy. I’ll start worrying when they start having any influence at all. There are bigger fish to fry out there.

  • @bouh@lemmy.world
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    591 year ago

    It’s easy to make a list of all communists countries that turned fascists and massacred people. You don’t do that with capitalists because there are simply too many, everywhere, in about all of history.

    • @nixcamic@lemmy.world
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      501 year ago

      It’s almost like the main problem with both authoritarian communism and authoritarian capitalism might be the authoritarianism.

      • Phoenixz
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        1 year ago

        Just that most captialist counties are democracies and all communist countries are authoritarian because communism and it’s limiting of rights doesn’t go without a dictatorship and the murder of millions of innocent people 😇

        • Cethin
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          The reason for this isn’t because they have to be dictatorships. It’s because the capitalist status-quo undermined any leftist nations. The only governments strong enough to last the CIA overthrow of them are strong central governments with cultural hegymony. This isnt to say these are good things (they aren’t), they are just stable. The entire red scare period was about destroying any nation that was even slightly left.

          The Guatemala coup for example was a dictatorship that was overthrown and a democracy was established. They elected a leftist president who implemented a minimum wage and returned land to the peasants, but the United Fruit Company didn’t like this. They had the CIA overthrow this new democracy and replace it with a dictatorship more aligned with US interests. This dictatorship proceeded to commit a genocide of the native inhabitants, all unopposed by the US.

          This is just one example from many similar events.

    • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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      171 year ago

      It would be 100% with capitalist as well.

      As DarthBueller@lemmy.world less succinctly put it. Capitalism is barely a few hundred years old. It’s barely existed a fraction of human history. It’s barely older than many of the original socialist ideals. Let alone all of history. Markets and currency predate capitalism and socialism by millennia. And neither has claim to them. Despite both making use of them.

      That said fuck leninists. Actual communists are pretty chill though. But leninists and capitalists are a threat to everyone. Including themselves.

      • @PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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        21 year ago

        That’s not entirely true. The Hudsons Bay Company, for instance, was on the stock market in the 1600s. The London Royal Exchange was built in the 1500s.

          • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            It’s extremely sad how purposefully western education has failed so many people on this front. You are 100% correct.

            • @mwguy@infosec.pub
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              51 year ago

              It really shouldn’t be that complex. Adam Smith, considered the Father of Capitalism, published The Wealth of Nations in 1776. So even if you argue that someone in power got a copy an implemented immediately; blaming Capitalism for things that happened before them is as backwards as blaming failures in Collectivism that happened before 1867 (Publishing of Das Kapital by Marx).

              I agree with you though, we definitely need better economic education in the US and likely the rest of the West too.

              • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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                21 year ago

                Definitely in the US. I find interactions with people outside the United States tend to go a little better and they have a better understanding. But sometimes still lack in many areas. In the US, however, we tend to be pretty consistently misinformed.

          • @PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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            11 year ago

            The Hudson’s Bay company was a joint stock company that was listed on the stock market. I don’t know what else to tell you, it was one of the first corporations in the world.

            • @mwguy@infosec.pub
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              11 year ago

              I don’t know if you know this. But the Hudson Bay Company predates capitalism. Other systems had stocks (joint ventures), markets and money that doesn’t make them Capitalist. Specifically the Hudson Bay Company arose in a system known as Mercantilism (you should read the link).

              It’s not just Society created then everything is Capitalist until Communism. Humans have tried many ways to organize both society and economy.

              • @PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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                11 year ago

                I know what mercantilism is. My point was that Hudson’s Bay company was a corporation, with a board of directors, investors who purchase stock, and the stock was listed on the stock market that allowed outside investors to invest in the company and to be paid in dividends from the company’s profits.

                In fact, the whole setup was designed to (drum roll) raise capital from outside investors to fund the expansion of the company.

      • @aidan@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Just as a true socialist country has never existed, a true capitalist country has never existed. Economies are always mixed.

        • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Socialists are not fans of, and often are opposed to the state. That’s the reason that a socialist state hasn’t and will never realistically exist. It’s an oxymoron. It’s got nothing to do with mixed economies. That’s just the reason exploitative authoritarians like capitalist indoctrinate people with to further their own goals.

          • @aidan@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            How do you define socialism? Because I think it contradicts with how I (and I think most others) would

            • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              It’s definitely does. But only because westerners especially are not properly educated on such things. It goes against the goals of the wealthy. I say that as a Westerner myself who only educated myself on it years later.

              Basically I reside somewhere between social democrat and true libertarian. Left libertarian. Right libertarians reject a large chunk of libertarianism and are therefore not actually libertarians. They’re just selfish and ignorant. Basically though an end to the bourgeoisie, worker ownership of the means of production not state, and much more simplified highly flattened governing structures. That would be the base and core of socialism. As traditionally defined.

    • @aidan@lemmy.world
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      161 year ago

      Just as a true socialist country has never existed, a true capitalist country has never existed. Economies are always mixed.

      • Phoenixz
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        81 year ago

        Ssshhhjttt, don’t be reasonable, you’re gonna make them cry

      • @bouh@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        If only we could imagine what a truly capitalist country would look like in the future! Like, I don’t know, we call this genra something like cyberpunk?

        • @aidan@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          Hahaha I win. I have created a work of fiction and where you are bad and I am good.

          But that also exists for my side, yk, Orwellian. Brave New World too.

            • @aidan@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              Usually media about utopias aren’t very interesting. But yeah many people have imagined capitalist utopias.

              • @bouh@lemmy.world
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                41 year ago

                On the contrary. Star trek is a well known utopia, and it’s definitely not capitalist. You didn’t mentioned a capitalist utopia still.

                • @aidan@lemmy.world
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                  21 year ago

                  I can’t think of any fictional utopias that are entirely utopian. I didn’t know Star Trek was utopian. I can think of a lot of medias that condemn different forms of central planning. I can’t think of any forms of media that condemn Georgism, or anarcho-socialism- does that mean those ideologies are good?

      • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        a true capitalist country has never existed.

        That may have something to do with the fact that there is no such thing as “true capitalism.” Capitalism is as “true” as it can possibly get.

        Economies are always mixed.

        There can be no “mixture” between socialism and capitalism. If the means of production isn’t controlled by workers it means there is no socialism to “mix” in the first place.

        • @aidan@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          The mix is that the control is mixed, for example through regulation but private ownership. As well as some production is fully state run. Socialism is generally understood to not be exclusively worker control, but include other forms of collective control- such as state control.

          • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Socialism is generally understood to not be exclusively worker control, but include other forms of collective control- such as state control.

            Generally understood by whom? If your understanding of socialism means state control it probably means your ideas of it doesn’t have much coherence at all.

            • @aidan@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              My understanding of socialism is that it describes collective control of the means of production, collective control can take many forms, including state control

              • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                Control by a bunch of party bureaucrats and apparatchiks who, like their counter-parts in corporate capitalist countries, are only interested in maintaining and expanding their own power and privilege in no way constitutes anything that can be called “collective” with a straight face - period.

                The term “socialism” has a very hard and uncompromising meaning - it becomes utterly meaningless when it becomes whatever “Dear Brother Comrade Leader” says it is.

        • If “true communist country” is taken to mean “libertarian socialist country”, which then it seems fair to say that a “true capitalist country” has never existed in the sense of a “libertarian capitalist country”. Taxation, commercial regulation, and public ownership (public land, utilities, schools, parks, roads, transportation, etc.) are all contrary to the capitalist ideology.

          • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            are all contrary to the capitalist ideology.

            Lol! No, they aren’t - capitalists have always understood that they need the protection of a state… it’s only a realtively small fringe of not-so-rich ideologues that loudly pretends otherwise.

            “Capitalist ideology” isn’t coherent - it doesn’t have to be, because the only purpose it has to serve is to provide pretexts and justifications for whatever the power and privilege of the wealthy requires. That’s why capitalists are perfectly happy to fund fascists into power when liberal regimes prove incapable of dealing with working-class revolt.

            • Lol! No, they aren’t - capitalists have always understood that they need the protection of a state… it’s only a realtively small fringe of not-so-rich ideologues that loudly pretends otherwise.

              You can’t use what you believe to be “true capitalism” in practice to prove that the practice is true capitalism. Yes, Lockean-adjacent ideologies require a government tasked with the protection of property, but you may have noticed that none of the examples I gave serve that purpose.

              That’s why capitalists are perfectly happy to fund fascists into power

              You are confusing capitalists with those who have benefitted from capitalism. People in power seldom support a system that allows them to easily lose power should a better alternative arise, despite those mechanisms being a foundational component of the efficient-market hypothesis.

              Respectfully, I don’t see the benefit of making this argument. To claim that socialized aspects of a generally capitalist society are not actually socialist is to claim that what are often the best aspects of the society do not support your beliefs. The fact that the “winners” of capitalism are incentivized not to be capitalists is a glaring problem; why not focus on that?

              • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                You can’t use what you believe to be “true capitalism” in practice to prove that the practice is true capitalism.

                No, but it might help to explain that there is no such thing as “true capitalism” because capitalists have never needed “true capitalism” - that is, unless you want to argue with the people who obsessively calculate Jeff Bezos’s net worth.

                but you may have noticed that none of the examples I gave serve that purpose.

                Are you not aware that your taxes fund the police? You know… the violent institution that was specifically invented by the capitalist class to protect the property of capitalists from the very people capitalists parasitize off?

                There is no point in trying to sound smart when it’s blatantly obvious that you can’t see what’s going on right in front of your nose, Clyde.

                You are confusing capitalists with those who have benefitted from capitalism.

                No… I don’t think I am.

                People in power seldom support a system that allows them to easily lose power should a better alternative arise

                So this “efficient-market hypothesis” isn’t worth the paper it’s written on?

                No surprises there.

                To claim that socialized aspects of a generally capitalist society are not actually socialist

                The term socialism has a very hard and uncompromising meaning which it has retained no matter the efforts spent trying to warp it. Unlike concepts such as fascism and capitalism, socialism actually requires logical consistency in order to be useful to the people it has always been intended to be useful for.

                Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence… and if you claim that anything has been “socialized” in a capitalist society (apart from all the real costs that the working-class has to bear in such a society) you need to provide evidence for that.

    • @SaakoPaahtaa@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      Liberal countries are the only ones capable of providing a safe and prosperous society for all. It doesn’t mean all liberal societies are like that, but liberalism is the only one that can create and maintain one.

      • @bouh@lemmy.world
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        91 year ago

        All but those who are excluded from it. Who are the slaves in your countries? How many societies had to be destroyed for your country to become what it is now?

        • @SaakoPaahtaa@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          Who are the slaves in your countries?

          Speaking for my country, uh idk, don’t think anyone here’s a slave. Occasionally you hear of some sketchy work practices, usually involving underpaid immigrant workers at restaurants but those issues are quickly dealt with.

          How many societies had to be destroyed for your country to become what it is now?

          None as far as I’m aware. We were first exploited by the swedish empire and later by the rus*ian empire. After which we were destroyed twice by soviets and barely scraped against the nazis. So I’d say we were on the colonized side of history rather than the exploiting colonial one, the swedish speaking population here still owns way more than the rest of the country - relatively speaking - as often is the case in exploited countries as old money never really dies out even if the underlying society progresses past it. Of course I’m glossing over a ton of historical events here and straightening out corners, but I’m happy with the answer.

            • @aidan@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              Czechoslovakia was leaning capitalist and prosperous before the Nazis and then Soviets invaded, both leaning much more leftist, and surpressing the people.

                • @aidan@lemmy.world
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                  21 year ago

                  In my opinion yes, but you’re free to have your own definitions for left and right since historians and economists alike disagree on their definitions too.

                  My definitions are basically, leftistism is collective control of the means of production. Rightism is individual control. The left is therefore a much more broas category as collective control can take a ton of different forms.

            • @SaakoPaahtaa@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              Damn it is hard for fascists to admit being wrong, isn’t it? Looking at yours and the other guys’ squirming is nearly cringe.

              • @bouh@lemmy.world
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                61 year ago

                Well, I’m living in a country that’s turning fascist. It prides itself for being the country of the human rights yet it’s being condemned by EU human rights tribunal regularly.

                In 50 years it was on a turbo run for liberalism. What this gave us is more poverty, more riches inequalities, less public services, mental health problems, and fascism might be our next government. Congratulation capitalism! Go on!

                I’m not advocating for fascism btw. But it is a fact that the winners or capitalism are turning their countries into fascist ones.

                • @SaakoPaahtaa@lemmy.world
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                  21 year ago

                  So it was liberal, and everything was good, and now it’s turning fascist and everything’s turning bad?

                  Read my first messages again now and think.

    • @DarthBueller@lemmy.world
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      111 year ago

      So capitalism has existed since “about all of history”? About as dumb a take as folks insisting that the Israel/Palestine conflict has been going on for thousands of years.

    • @Aux@lemmy.world
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      61 year ago

      You don’t do that with capitalists because capitalism does not exist in authoritarian regimes.

      • @bouh@lemmy.world
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        111 year ago

        Hahahaha! Sure! Capitalism goes in pair with democracy and never bred fascism! And it will totaly never be neo-feudalism!

        • @aidan@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Democracy doesn’t mean non-authoritarian. Nor free. Democratic societies often are authoritarian.

            • @aidan@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              No? Imo democracy essentially boils down to majority rule. The majority often oppressed the minority

              • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                While that could technically be a possibility under democracy. Don’t you find it? Extremely ironic that no democracy in the world could currently be described that way? That they’ve all been turned on their head with the minority ruling over the majority?

                And basically when it comes down to it they are incompatible or different. Because under authoritarianism you don’t have any say, regardless of whether you’re in the minority or the majority.

                • @aidan@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  In the US: I’d prefer stronger protections against externalities (so pollution and so on). Removal of IP protections, deregulation of drug production but also drug companies losing protections so they can more easily be sued. Easier medical licensing. Ending federal student lending, so universities have to lower prices. Open borders. And I’m sure many other things. So, I’d say making it more capitalist, but I guess it somewhat depends how you define capitalism.

    • PugJesus
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      51 year ago

      It’s easy to make a list of all communists countries that turned fascists and massacred people.

      Because there’s a 100% overlap with “ML countries” and “Red-painted fascist murderers”?

  • @dylanTheDeveloper@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Yeah quite a large portion of lemmings are politically insane. It’s either ‘burn the rich, overthrow the government’ or ‘Maybe the windmill party has a valid point’

    Like why can’t people just be chill and get along

    • @Shiggles@sh.itjust.works
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      481 year ago

      Hey now, don’t go lumping “eat the rich” in with these crazies. I can hate tankies and hate our growing wealth inequalities

        • @Shiggles@sh.itjust.works
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          131 year ago

          God that would be a depressing thought. Thankfully, a tankie’s idea of communism is in fact not the only solution, we need only look at democratic socialist countries like Denmark.

          I think it’s fine for people to be rich. I don’t think it’s fine for that to be at the expense of the poor to such a ridiculous magnitude that the wealth has long become moot for that individual’s quality of life:

            • @co209@lemmy.world
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              41 year ago

              Thanks for the sauce! The Nordic argument gets used far too often by center-leftists in the core imperial countries because they already assume a level of available wealth which can only be sustained by the exploitation of the colonized rest of the world.

              The greed of the rich will never be sated. They may retreat or bide their time but they will come back for more, until they have sucked every drop of your blood.

          • @Cowbee@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Just wanted to point out that Denmark is a Social Democracy, not Democratic Socialist. The vast majority of the economy is fully Capitalist, paying for Social Programs isn’t Socialism, Worker Ownership of the Means of Production is.

            If you want to argue for Social Democracy, go for it, but don’t pretend it’s actually Socialism.

          • @goldenlocks@lemmy.world
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            61 year ago

            Denmark

            Only communists in the US are calling for nationalization of oil. About 75% of Denmark’s oil is nationalized and lets them fund social programs. Liberals in the US would never accept that.

    • db0
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      291 year ago

      Well, the people “being chill and getting along” (i.e. just keeping the status quo going) is nowadays supporting a genocide,so…

    • @Lauchs@lemmy.world
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      101 year ago

      Well put! I love this place and have had some good discussions but I’ve also seen a lot of teenage political craziness and had that “oh, I’m talking to a lunatic or a child” sensation more often than I’d have liked to.

    • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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      91 year ago

      Like why can’t people just be chill and get along

      I think the hurtling toward climate crises has a lot of people desperate for governments to actually do something to help assuage it, not make it worse.

    • @Wooster@startrek.website
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      51 year ago

      I suspect we needed a baseline level of insane to not just threaten to jump Reddit, but actually follow through on it.

  • alternative_factor
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    241 year ago

    NNNOOOO!!! HOW DARE YOU UN-WHITEWASH LENIN!!! NOOOO!!! Tankies tried SO HARD to make Makhno disappear like Trotsky! You LIBERAL AMERICANS!!! REEEEEE!!!

    • mycorrhiza they/them
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      Here is Makhno in 1920 after agreeing to a temporary ceasefire:

      "Military hostilities between the Makhnovist revolutionary insurgents and the Red Army have ceased. Misunderstandings, vagueness and inaccuracies have grown up around this truce: it is said that Makhno has repented of his anti-Bolshevik acts, that he has recognized the soviet authorities, etc. How are we to understand, what construction are we to place upon this peace agreement?

      What is very clear already is that no intercourse of ideas, and no collaboration with the soviet authorities and no formal recognition of these has been or can be possible. We have always been irreconcilable enemies, at the level of ideas, of the party of the Bolshevik-communists.

      We have never acknowledged any authorities and in the present instance we cannot acknowledge the soviet authorities. So again we remind and yet again we emphasize that, whether deliberately or through misapprehension, there must be no confusion of military intercourse in the wake of the danger threatening the revolution with any crossing-over, ‘fusion’ or recognition of the soviet authorities, which cannot have been and cannot ever be the case."

      — quoted in Nestor Makhno: Anarchy’s Cossack, a pro-Makhno book

        • mycorrhiza they/them
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          21 year ago

          it appears to have been mutually understood

          After the Seige of Perekop, Makhno’s aide-de-camp Grigori Vassilevsky, announced the agreement was over:

          That’s the end for the agreement! Take my word for it, within one week the Bolsheviks are going to come down on us like a ton of bricks!

          — Grigori Vassilevsky, quoted in the same book

  • Celeste
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    211 year ago

    You didn’t mention the Prague Spring or the whole of the assassination attempts on Tito or the East German uprising in 1953.

  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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    211 year ago

    I like how all the pictures are wojacks or hand drawns and Khrushchev is just his character from Oversimplified

    • @jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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      221 year ago

      There are still plenty of members of the Leninist tankie cult left - look at the positions of most Communist Parties in Europe. To make things worse, I think most of them don’t even realize that the Soviet Union is gone and that China became a cyberpunkish corporatocracy that puts the worst western country to shame.

      • @dustyData@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        I’m a fan of the term Kleptocracy. It seems to describe well a lot of newish regimes in south east Asia and south America, and it applies well to China and the United States of America as well.

        • He does suck for a lot of reasons, but if you’re not an accelerationist you don’t have much choice.

          It just so happens that he’s the less bad choice that we happen to have. We could be a lot better, we could be a lot worse.

          Better doesn’t necessarily mean good, just… Better.

  • Queen HawlSera
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    111 year ago

    If tankies when they’re gonna be real surpises when the qouta for poets was met ages ago and it’s time to go to the coal mines.

  • @Pratai@lemmy.ca
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    101 year ago

    Calling people “tankies” calls forth an imagine of old men yelling at everyone to stay off their lawn.

    • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      91 year ago

      You mean, instead of the definition of being fans of genocidal maniacs who would turn tanks onto the population?

      • @Pratai@lemmy.ca
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        11 year ago

        I couldn’t care less what they are, it using derogatory terms to describe someone is childish.

    • @YeetPics@mander.xyz
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      1 year ago

      For me it gets me picturing the tank man getting turned into ground beef by a tank while his countrymen cheer.

  • @Filthmontane@lemmy.world
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    21 year ago

    I’m not familiar with the incident with Khrushchev, but the others didn’t just kill the anarchists for no reason. Each leader was faced with an incredibly unstable country and economy. Anarchists hate government. So naturally, they’ll join with the other leftists to take down the government. But, once the revolution is over, it’s time to reorganize and reestablish a government. As I said though, anarchists hate government. So, they continue to destabilize and fight against the government, even though the new government is trying to reorganize and develop a stable economy.

    Each groups was told to stand down and join in rebuilding the their respective countries or risk causing more widespread famine and throw the country into… Well anarchy. The problem isn’t that these leaders are necessarily evil men for what they did to the anarchists. The problem is the dangers that the anarchists created for the people of China and the Soviet Union. This is why Anarchism has never succeeded on a large scale. It’s only good at disruption and destruction. Read about Spain in the late 19th century for examples. No country can survive under constant revolution.