On this server we are often victim of this stuff, i hope we can all improve

  • PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca
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    13 hours ago

    I got several comments removed and a ban from the Beehaw community for reminding Americans of their first few amendments.

    Apparently, Americans won’t even listen to their own country’s constitution. Especially the part that talks about amendments made and rights to be exercised in the event of government tyranny.

    Fix your shit because the moment your country crosses the border and starts shit with Canada, it will be open season on every single America.

    • ex_06@slrpnk.netOPM
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      12 hours ago

      Buddy i understand your rage but i’m not sure how it relates to the post…

      p.s. Try sticking to the rules of the server please ^ - ^

      • PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca
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        12 hours ago

        It’s directly related to the topic of the post. Americans trying to post their way out of their own cultural endpoint and then over-moderating when they don’t like hearing that they may have to get off social media and start taking real action.

        Please do inform me of any server rules that this broke. I’m always eager to learn.

        • ex_06@slrpnk.netOPM
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          11 hours ago

          Americans trying to post their way out of their own cultural endpoint

          Oh i see. I did the post not focussing on americans tbf, i’m not one. The ‘‘i know too much stuff everything is broken’’ paralysis given by the social is real in the whole world where social media is present

          then over-moderating when they don’t like hearing

          ohhh ok

          Please do inform me of any server rules that this broke

          To me it looked like a non constructive rant born by a recent ban from other places and also ended up with a killing threat on an entire population (open season on every single american)

          • PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca
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            2 hours ago

            a killing threat on an entire population

            Yes this is exactly what American threats against Canada’s sovereignty is. They are actively waging economic and information warfare on Canada with the intent on annexation. If you classify Canadians defending their own lives and sovereignty as a “killing threat” then that’s where we fundamentally disagree as I believe people should defend themselves when attacked, not sit there and take it as you suggest.

  • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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    20 hours ago

    Posting is an outlet for me, it helps me reorganize my thoughts and not do something rash.

    I agree that simply posting isn’t enough. But acting egregiously without strategy is potentially a problem too.

  • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    1 day ago

    I think a lot of places that prohibit talking about violence are supporting the horrors. Like, it’d be swell if we could vote ourselves out of this mess but that seems like a long shot, and a lot of damage would be done before that even started to take effect.

    I get most of us don’t actually want to risk our lives. We don’t want to be the one guy who throws a molotov and gets shot by the police.

    But shit is really bad, and at the end of all things might makes right. Principles and philosophy don’t matter if you’re dead.

    I think everyone’s thought about like “what if i went back in time and shot Hitler before things got really bad?” Well, that’s now. You’ve arrived at the time travel destination.

    I don’t really want to live in a world where republicans are shot dead, where the prosecutors putting people in jail for protesting are murdered in their sleep, or where the owners of a factory that pollutes the air we breathe are beaten so badly they’ll never walk again. But I also don’t want to live in the world those forces will create if left unchecked.

    Besides, the right has been using stochastic terrorism for years.

    • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      23 hours ago

      Just remember that violence is so often counterproductive to the point where governments intentionally bait or false flag it as a core part of their strategy to take down activist groups. This article focuses on ways people can organize to help each other, rather than assassinations:

      Here in New York City, in the week since the inauguration, I’ve seen large groups mobilize to defend migrants from anticipated ICE raids and provide warm food and winter clothes for the unhoused after the city closed shelters and abandoned people in sub-freezing temperatures. Similar efforts are underway in Chicago, where ICE reportedly arrested more than 100 people, and in other cities where ICE has planned or attempted raids, with volunteers assigned to keep watch over key locations where migrants are most vulnerable.

      A few weeks earlier, residents created ad-hoc mutual aid distros in Los Angeles to provide food and essentials for those displaced by the wildfires. The coordinated efforts gave Angelenos a lifeline during the crisis, cutting through the false claims spreading on social media about looting and out-of-state fire trucks being stopped for “emissions testing.”

      I’ve been reading a (confusingly named) book, The Anarchist Cookbook, which I think has some strong arguments about this stuff, here is an excerpt:

      Solnit’s essay on the Oakland assault on Whole Foods is pertinent here: “This account is by a protestor who also noted in downtown Oakland that day a couple of men with military-style haircuts and brand new clothes put bandanas over their faces and began to smash stuff.” She thinks that infiltrators might have instigated the property destruction, and Copwatch’s posted video seems to document police infiltrators at Occupy Oakland. One way to make the work of provocateurs much more difficult is to be clearly committed to tactics that the state can’t co-opt: nonviolent tactics. If an infiltrator wants to nonviolently blockade or march or take out the garbage, well, that’s useful to us. If an infiltrator sabotages us by recruiting others to commit mayhem, that’s a comment on what such tactics are good for. Solnit quotes Oakland Occupier Sunaura Taylor: “A few people making decisions that affect everyone else is not what revolution looks like; it’s what capitalism looks like.” Peter Marshall’s book on the history of anarchism, Demanding the Impossible, points out that “The word violence comes from the Latin violare and etymologically means violation. Strictly speaking, to act violently means to treat others without respect … A violent revolution is therefore unlikely to bring about any fundamental change in human relations. Given the anarchists’ respect for the sovereignty of the individual, in the long run it is nonviolence and not violence which is implied by anarchist values.”

      • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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        10 hours ago

        Why is it counter productive? I guess because uninvolved people clutch their pearls and then support the police/capitalists?

        The huge support for Luigi makes me think there may be a change in the air. But also that was precisely targeted, not just randomly murdering. If he had set off a bomb and killed 30 people in midtown New York, even if one was a hated CEO, I don’t think people would support him.

        • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 hours ago

          Here is another excerpt which is more relevant to more extreme acts of political violence, which is referencing this essay:

          text

          Events in recent years have amply demonstrated the correctness of its main points: 1) That means determine ends—the use of horrifying means guarantees horrifying ends; 2) That urban guerrillaism almost always leads to repression and little else—which makes it very difficult to engage in constructive political work such as organizing and education; 3) That “successful” urban guerrillaism leads to authoritarian outcomes; 4) That these results are determined by the nature of guerrillaism. Guerrillaism relies upon the capitalist media for much of its impact, presenting political acts as spectacles divorced from the day-to-day lives of ordinary people (reducing them to passive spectators), while providing the corporate media with a perfect opportunity to frighten the public into the “protective” arms of the state. To put it another way, guerrillas presume to act for the people—attempting to substitute individual acts for mass actions—thus perpetuating the division between leaders and followers (in this case, vanguardists and spectators). While the authors of You Can’t Blow Up a Social Relationship reject terrorism, it should be emphasized that they are not arguing for political passivity. They are not arguing against the many forms of direct action which form an essential part of any mass movement for fundamental social change. (Examples of such direct action include wildcat strikes, factory occupations, and civil disobedience.) Neither do they discount the quieter but equally essential efforts of those doing educational work. Finally, it should be noted that the authors are not pacifists; they believe that situations may arise in which armed self-defense becomes necessary.

          So there’s a lot of reasons, only one of which is “uninvolved people clutch their pearls” ie. fear is generated and authoritarians get fed political capital to make things worse. There’s also direct relevance to the point being made in the OP article: its actual impact focuses on media spectacle, in which most participants are reduced to unconnected spectators. This leads to the narrative

          writing itself into a corner:

          By the time the drama has become tragedy and the guerrillas lie dead about the stage, the audience of masses finds itself surrounded by barbed wire, and, while it might now feel impelled to take the stage itself, it finds a line of tanks blocking it and weakly files out to remain passive again. Those individuals who continue to object and call on the audience to storm the stage are dragged out, struggling, to the concentration camps. Guerrillaism is in the tradition of vanguardist strategies for revolution. While in general it merely leads to repression, should the strategy succeed it can only produce an authoritarian leftist regime. This is because the people have not moved into the building of a democratic movement themselves.

          After all, that CEO was replaced immediately, they’re still doing the same things, just now a lot of people are having fun posting memes about it, which is cathartic and enjoyable without being difficult or risky or meaningfully improving the situation. It doesn’t put them in a position where they have habits and social relationships that would enable them to actually do anything to help each other or exercise direct political involvement. From the OP article:

          But when it comes to addressing the problems we face, no amount of posting or passive info consumption is going to substitute the hard, unsexy work of organizing.

          • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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            1 hour ago

            That was an interesting read. Thank you. I’ll have to do some thinking on it, and read more carefully when I’m not befogged by a head cold.

            I still want, like, emotionally, the horrible people to face justice (or at least vengeance), but i can see how that can have myriad unwanted consequences.

            Getting people to actually organize is hard. One of the consequences of what Luigi (allegedly) did was people at work started to actually talk about politics, where before it had been a little more gauche (pun intended). Will anything come of it? Probably not.

            At that job, I feel like I was planting seeds of radicalization just by talking to people about US history. Several of them hadn’t grown up here, and had a very glossy marketing understanding. Just telling them about how like Jim Crow is a thing from living memory, not centuries ago, was eye opening.

    • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      But shit is really bad, and at the end of all things might makes right. Principles and philosophy don’t matter if you’re dead.

      Not necessarily. There have been some successful non-violent revolutions in history, and there’s a strong case to be made that not exhausting those options could be a huge mistake.

      We still have, right now, completely un-used tools at our disposal, such as unionizing en masse and deploying a general strike, which is insanely powerful (capable of bringing a nation to its knees if done widely enough), while being far less dangerous and more appealing to the general populace than any other means.

      • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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        1 day ago

        To be clear, I support other options like a general strike and unionizing (though I think forming a union is only a bandaid on top of the evils of capitalism, it’s better than nothing).

        I don’t think “just vote for the democrats in 4 years” is a viable strategy on its own.

        But even so, these have to be backed by might. If you do a strike and they send police to do violence to you, you have to be ready to fight back.

        • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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          7 hours ago

          It’s also important to remember that there is no magic bullet. Nothing is a viable strategy on it’s own.

          It’s my own personal conspiracy theory that our natural hesitance to throw resources at unknown variables is being amplified by the ruling class and fed back to us in the form of the all-or-nothing perfectionism I’ve seen a lot this past election cycle.

          We need to be building with the blocks we have, and Theil et al are using the fear of failure to encourage us to fight each other about whether we should use square blocks or rectangle blocks.

        • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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          1 day ago

          I see the workplace benefits of a global union (specifically the IWW) as a bonus, with the real meat being that it teaches people how to organize, and how much power they truly can wield collectively, as many people still feel quite powerless despite the potential they hold, they need only be taught how to use it.

          When the Spanish Civil War kicked off, it was the Syndicalist unions (CNT-FAI) that were able to organize their communities effectively to resist Franco and transform Catalonia when the existing government crumbled. That type of organization doesn’t necessarily have to be from a union, but I feel the ability to engage in a general strike would be far more encouraged if people were in a union and became used to flexing that muscle (and build up a strike fund to be able to sustain it) and would drastically help in effectively resisting.

          • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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            1 day ago

            This is a good point. I hadn’t thought much about how some of the skills and such from unionizing might transfer to other things. Thanks

      • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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        22 hours ago

        Well said. From my outsider perspective a general strike is ideal for the situation in the US rn. The benefits of a general strike are

        1. you can force politicians to pass things they wpuldn’t have the initiative to pass themselves (like universal healthcare), as long as you have a manifesto that’s surgically precise (eg. with pre-prepared drafts of laws) and you refuse to cease until that manifesto has been passed as law verbatim.

        2. it’s still fully constitutional. On paper, the politicians came up with these ideas and passed them out of their own volition.

        3. the unity & platform created by a general strike would create very good conditions for a 3rd party to have an actual chance of winning seats.

        All you need is some philanthropist who will create a massive strike fund.

        • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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          Relying on a philanthropist is risky, and possibly unviable if the scale is large enough. Most strike funds are created and maintained using union dues, which would scale up to any size. The unfortunate part is that it generally takes time to fill them, and we’re a bit short on that.

          • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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            22 hours ago

            True, relying on a single donor would make the strike too vulnerable to their influence, much like political parties

        • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          I didn’t mean to imply I support violence as a first strategy.

          I actually wholeheartedly agree with your assessment. Partially because the violence against us is coming anyway. It is clearly planned. They are telegraphing what they intend to do, which is criminalize half the country so they can put us to death under the guise of “why couldn’t they just follow the law.”

          That being said, just because the violence is coming doesn’t mean inviting it right away is the best solution. The best solutions are the kind you suggest but also using Mutual Aid to develop Parallel Systems.

          Parallel systems are simply systems outside of the capitalist mode of production and integration. Providing water, food, medical care, housing, support, and so on. The efforts of the Black Panthers were an exercise in developing parallel systems. The Black Panthers also knew violence was coming which is why a contingent of them were armed. Having such systems in place makes it easier for individuals to survive a long-term General Strike.

          The testimony and cross examination of undercover officers by Afeni Shakur stands the test of time when she showed that the people pushing violence in the Panthers were undercover police officers:

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afeni_Shakur#The_Panther_21

          Shakur got White to admit under oath that he and two other agents had organized most of the unlawful activities. “She asked him if he’d ever seen her carry a gun or kill anyone or bomb anything and he answered no, no, no. Then she asked if he’d seen her doing Panther organizing in a school and a hospital and on the streets and he answered, yes, yes, yes.

          We must be prepared to resist the violence that is coming, but to do so without organizing and planning is a fools errand.

          • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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            1 day ago

            i don’t know a lot about the history of the black panther movement (not surprising nothing about it was taught to me in school). Infiltration by the government/antagonists is a real concern. As is being murdered like fred hampton. I don’t really know how to guard against that. The “They pull a knife you pull a gun. They put one of us in the hospital, you put them in the morque” attitude has bravado, but isn’t really safe or sustainable. But on the same time, just being casually murdered isn’t either.

          • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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            Apologies, I accidentally replied to your comment when I’d meant to respond to the commenter you had also responded to. Though I’m somewhat glad I did, as your response here was also excellent :)

  • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    I think a big issue is that the people educated enough to understand how desperate things may be are not naturally inclined to lead simply because we are more often than not deeply aware of our limitations and spend time telling ourselves we are not the right person to be leading.

    But everything has to start somewhere. Someone had to throw the first brick at Stonewall. Being a leader can be scary because you don’t know if anyone else will actually follow. It is a massive personal risk, especially to someone already aware of their own limitations and need for others.

    I struggle with it because I would rather join an already existing Mutual Aid group instead of doing the work of organizing it myself. I am inherently disorganized. I do not see myself as a leader. I see myself as good at following processes, reading, following directions. I am moderately good at writing but I say enough stupid stuff that others don’t agree with that I could accidentally alienate groups whose input and involvement are desperately needed. I fear leadership because of how often I put my foot in my mouth. I fear it because of how important it is and how many people come to rely on leadership. I think a great leader is one who teaches people how to lead themselves. Finally, if there is anything I have learned in life is that it is very easy to be thinking you’re teaching the right lesson but you actually taught people something completely different and disturbing to you. I fear accidentally teaching the wrong lessons.

    But the question is this: Are all those fears, all those questions, all that awareness of our own limitations… Could that be perhaps what actually creates a good leader whose goals align with those they represent? A question we should all be asking ourselves.

    That being said, I still have no idea where to start. Especially in a conservative, regressive area. Hunter Thompson was right that we need to learn to speak their language, which is why he wrote in sports metaphors. Problem is, I am not like him, I don’t know how to speak to them. I feel that may be my biggest limitation in making headway. Not just because I don’t know how but because the simplistic way they communicate eats at my soul, I don’t like it and struggle to think I could speak that language.

  • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    It’s not that we can’t beat fascism, it’s that the amount of people that want fascism is way too high, and might soon to be the majority.

    How do you save a country from something most of them want?

    • ex_06@slrpnk.netOPM
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      1 day ago

      Are you sure that the majority wants it? Do they want actual fascism or they want what fascism promises? :)

        • ex_06@slrpnk.netOPM
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          You don’t need to educate anyone… I too would not trust someone who comes to me thinking of “educating” me :P

          Think about what to do and plan and organize accordingly. Trying to be aligned more and more is just deleterious

          • jsomae@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            What is your plan, exactly? I don’t understand how we can rebel against fascism if there aren’t enough people on the same page that it’s bad.

          • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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            Oh yeah, don’t get me wrong, we should do what we can.

            My point was more about that sometimes it’s a numbers game, so you get stuck between a rock and a violent place (as in violence or civil war might end up being the only options).

    • Sl00k@programming.dev
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      it’s that the amount of people that want fascism is way too high

      Perhaps in the Midwest, but I believe there are areas of the US that this doesn’t represent such as the west coast.

      I see a split amongst US inevitable and it was basically written in stone the day the Democrats supported genocide and again each time they choose billionaires over their constituents. In my opinion we need to start moving these states in that direction.

  • BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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    I really really really wished that all of the internet were forced to read this entire article or be banned from using it permanently. This shit is written very well and right on the nose.

    It’s very apparent everyone wants to complain and have someone else do the work for them; everywhere I read across the internet it’s lazy as fuck people calling other people to action, including egging any mentally ill people that happen to read their comment to go out and commit crimes for them.

    Case-in-point, go to any reddit post and find any of the top voted comment where a leftist is saying "someone needs to stop XYZ politician! " often implying violence when you contextually consider what they are saying.

    Go to any post that is summoning Conservatives to answer what they think of the next dogshit Trump decision and why they aren’t using Second Amendment rights to eliminate tyrants, forgetting that they, the Democrat poster themselves could also go out and buy a gun and do it themselves.

    • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      Evidence to support your view:

      I have cancer, I have often been open about it here on Lemmy. Several times post-Luigi I was told I should “do some good” and “Luigi myself” since I’m already at risk of dying under this oppressive regime.

      Lazy able bodied fucks asking the people who are actually suffering to do their dirty work for them. I remember distinctly saying at one point “Maybe for the first time in history it’s time for the able bodied to stand up for the ill, weak, and disabled instead of expecting us to off ourselves since in their eyes we have ‘nothing left to lose.’” It’s a cruel joke.

      • ksigley@lemm.ee
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        I’m sorry that happened to you. Whomever said that will not see the light of Heaven.

    • poVoq@slrpnk.netM
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      Case-in-point, go to any reddit post and find any of the top voted comment where a leftist is saying "someone needs to stop XYZ politician! " often implying violence when you contextually consider what they are saying.

      This has been a tactic of the right for decades, earning the moinker of “stochastic terrorism”, but it has been very rare on the left.

      After Luigi (who isn’t a leftist btw.) there has been a bit of an uptick, but it doesn’t really work as there isn’t an leftist audience that would seriously consider this and has sufficient experience with weapons (so far I guess).

    • ex_06@slrpnk.netOPM
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      15 hours ago

      entire article

      Yep, I kept it in the read it later for long and didn’t regret it.

      I can already read some comments in this post from people who probably haven’t read the whole article but just the title. To be fair the title is a bit misleading because it should be more “rageposting or smartassing online won’t make our way out of fascism”