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Stop arguing with him.
Yes, it does. Now fuck off and do Nazi shit somewhere else.
“Never believe that anti-Semites are completely unaware of the absurdity of their replies. They know that their remarks are frivolous, open to challenge. But they are amusing themselves, for it is their adversary who is obliged to use words responsibly, since he believes in words. The anti-Semites have the right to play. They even like to play with discourse for, by giving ridiculous reasons, they discredit the seriousness of their interlocutors. They delight in acting in bad faith, since they seek not to persuade by sound argument but to intimidate and disconcert. If you press them too closely, they will abruptly fall silent, loftily indicating by some phrase that the time for argument is past.”
Wow it’s almost like plugging your ear and going “LALALA I CAN’T HEAR YOU CLIMATE CHANGE BECAUSE YOURE NOT REAL LALALALA” isn’t going to fucking stop climate change.
Time to stop treating these very obviously right wing affiliated school shooters as long wolfs. They’re not lone. They’re part of a cell style right wing terrorist organization.
Hell yeah, if you’re not ready to loose something you’re not protesting right.
IDK even they don’t seem happy. Elon seems fucking miserable. I mean, I don’t feel bad for them, but knowing that literally everyone thinks the world would be a better place without you can’t feel great.
The world already is that way though…
They’re trying to get rid of the NWS because they want to privatize access to weather data.
Imagine what it will be like when you have to pay to receive severe weather alerts. These bastards are just trying to make it (even more) fatal to be poor.
Hey, just a few thoughts I wanted to share in response to this:
First, citing the CIA to praise Stalin is… an odd move. Second, it’s important to recognize that liberals and neoliberals aren’t the same thing. The terms get conflated a lot, but they refer to different ideological frameworks, especially in terms of economics and state intervention. Neoliberalism is basically a rebranding of laissez-faire capitalism whereas liberalism favors more of a welfare-state capitalist system.
Third, I’d encourage reading the full context of the document in question. Here are a few excerpts that stood out:
There will not be a dramatic purge.
This might seem like a neutral observation, but it’s actually referring to a change after Stalin’s death. The implication is that dramatic purges did happen under him, and they’re noting that the new leadership wouldn’t continue that pattern.
Inasmuch as the MVD has already been cleaned up.
Again, this is post-Stalin. The MVD (Interior Ministry, which ran the secret police) being “cleaned up” suggests reform following abuses that were, again, tied to Stalin’s regime.
There is now no organized opposition inside the Party in the Soviet Union.
This kind of political consolidation didn’t happen in a vacuum. It reflects the legacy of Stalin’s crackdowns on dissent and internal opposition.
Since the death of Stalin and the blow which was given to the power of the secret police…
That’s a pretty direct reference to Stalin’s reliance on the secret police to maintain control. Again, the document frames the aftermath of his death as a shift away from that.
No improvement in the food situation can be expected.
This points to long-standing issues in agricultural production and distribution under the USSR, including during Stalin’s time. Whether or not the shortages were intentional, they’re part of the broader legacy of how poorly the Soviet agricultural system was managed. They were pretty much just experimenting with ways to grow food while failing to produce enough for their own population. I’m all for agricultural research, but only after the people are fed.
In short, this isn’t a glowing report of Stalin’s achievements. It’s describing a system trying to recover from the kind of authoritarian control he enforced.
If you’re interested in more critical perspectives from the time, I really recommend My Disillusionment in Russia and My Further Disillusionment in Russia by Emma Goldman. They were written in the early 1920s (just as Stalin was rising to power) and they offer a fascinating, firsthand account of someone who initially supported the revolution (Emma Goldman was an American anarchist exiled to Russia for her beliefs) but became deeply disillusioned with how it played out.
We really don’t need to dig up dead guys to give them accolades. We can think of a better system that the USSR or USA.
Is anyone else starting to get some real Pol Pot vibes from ICE?