• Hexadecimalkink@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Why are the libs so hung up on criticizing socialists? If you don’t like this forum then go back to reddit.

            • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              When people say “anti-woke”, they actually mean that they are anti-doing anything about the awareness of systemic inequality that wokeness indicates. By definition, someone who is against change/progress is a conservative, so when someone says they are anti-woke, they are by definition expressing a conservative stance. That is, wanting to do something about systemic inequality is synonymous with having a progressive stance on systemic inequality.

              Being a tankie, on the other hand, is not synonymous with being a comunist. Tankies are just one form of communist (militant).

              • brain_in_a_box [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                And when people say they are “anti-tankie”, they actually mean that they are anti doing anything about the awareness of systematic inequality that tankie indicates. By definition, someone who is against change/progress is a conservative, so when someone says they are anti-tankie, they are by definition expressing a conservative stance. That is, wanting to do something about systemic inequality is synonymous with having a progressive stance on systemic inequality.

                Being a tankie, on the other hand, is not synonymous with being a comunist. Tankies are just one form of communist (militant).

                Other way around: communists are just one form of tankies, the word is also used to refer to anarchists and some soc-dems.

                • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  You’re spun around, flipped upside-down, and confused as can be.

                  Tankie is a term that specifically refers to one particular kind of communism; namely, the kind that supports authoritarian regimes that try to impose communism through the use of force to repress dissent.

                  You can be a communist and not be a tankie. You cannot be against progress and be a progressive.

                  • brain_in_a_box [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    You’re spun around, flipped upside-down, and confused as can be.

                    Very compelling, but have you considered

                    spoiler

                    PIGPOOPBALLS

                    Tankie is a term that specifically refers to one particular kind of communism

                    No, it’s used to refer a wide, vague blob of vibes, just like the word woke. The people who use it can can do use it to refer to all kinds of communists, most anarchists, and anything to the left of Elizabeth Warren in general.

                    that try to impose communism through the use of force.

                    As opposed to the kind of communism where you ask nicely for revolution? Have you actually read any Marx? I guarantee he was not a pacifist.

                    You can be a communist and not be a tankie

                    By your own definition you cannot, let alone by a definition of tankie that describes how libs actually use it.

                  • AcidSmiley [she/her]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    Tankie is a term that specifically refers to one particular kind of communism

                    Nope, tankie originally referred specifically to British labor party members supporting the USSR’s actions against the coup in Hungary, and today is used to refer to any anti-imperialist leftist, regardless of tendency. Of course all of you claim otherwise, but these claims are provably empty, as nobody who uses the term today, including you in this thread, bothers to check for the actual political views of the people you call tankie, you see something that may go against the state department narratives that are spoonfed to you by V*ush and the reddit front page or whoever else has done this pseudo-leftist brainworming to you and you start yelling tankie at the top of your liberal, western-chauvinist lungs. A good number of the people posting on hexbear are anarchists and DemSocs, but you will label all of them tankie as long as they critically support China or question the narrative on the new forever war in Ukraine, which to you equals “thinking today’s Russia is true communism” and similar nonsense. Your understanding of politics is damaged beyond repair by being socialized as a smartass debatelord who has become entirely incapable of forming judgements not based on learned reflex and of engaging in good faith conversations. I would pity you if people like you wouldn’t be such a disaster for the Western left and for anybody in the Global South suffering from the continued imperialism you help enable by fighting the last genuine critics of genocidal US policies that are left in the West. You CIA tool, you psyop casualty, you neocon bootlicker.

                  • ElHexo [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    impose communism through the use of force to repress dissent.

                    All societies impose force to repress dissent (other than anarchist communes I guess, where force is mediated by norms)

            • Dr. Jenkem@lemmy.blugatch.tube
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              1 year ago

              Tankie usually refers to Marxism-Leninism (as well the ideologies that derived from it such as Maoism). But there are communist ideologies that don’t derive from ML such as Orthodox Marxism, trotskyism, libertarian Marxism, bulshevism, etc.

              • ghost_of_faso2@lemmygrad.ml
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                1 year ago

                Tankie usually refers to Marxism-Leninism

                no it usually refers to whatever the fuck the person posting it seems to think it is, there is not a coherent label for it.

                Orthodox Marxism, trotskyism, libertarian Marxism, bulshevism, etc.

                Oh cool, which societies use those?

                • Dr. Jenkem@lemmy.blugatch.tube
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                  1 year ago

                  no it usually refers to whatever the fuck the person posting it seems to think it is, there is not a coherent label for it.

                  Why are you letting libs define everything? You and I both know they’re dumbasses and shouldn’t be taken seriously.

                  Oh cool, which societies use those?

                  Anyone could have said the same to Marx about communism at any point in his life, as he died before the October revolution.

                  • ghost_of_faso2@lemmygrad.ml
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                    1 year ago

                    Anyone could have said the same to Marx about communism at any point in his life, as he died before the October revolution.

                    the difference is you named a bunch of dead ideologies that will never be revived, ML is literally the only form of marxism still flourishing

                  • o_d [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
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                    1 year ago

                    Why are you letting libs define everything? You and I both know they’re dumbasses and shouldn’t be taken seriously.

                    Yeah I’m sure everyone in the lemmyverse is using the word tankie to refer to those of us who support the 1956 Soviet intervention in Hungary /s

              • geikei [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                How would Trotskyism be any less “authoritarian” Than marxism leninism ? Also almost every claims on some level to be “orthodox marxist”, lenin most of all and MLs as well

            • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              Telling someone to read Marx to understand modern day socialism is like telling someone to read Newton to understand modern day physics tbh.

              • ghost_of_faso2@lemmygrad.ml
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                1 year ago

                Newton to understand modern day physics

                I mean yeah, if you want to understand the devolopment of physics you are required to understand the foundations it was built on, this is basic study.

                Its like telling someone they should read the bible if they want to be christian, or telling someone they should read the instruction manual if they want to actually know what the terms they are using mean.

                • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  Yeah, you should read Marx if you want to understand the historical development of socialist ideas, but if that’s where your reading ends, then your ideas are stuck in the past.

                  Socialism isn’ta religious dogma that is inflexible and unchanging. It’s an intellectual idea that grows and becomes more refined over time.

                  • GreatWhiteNope [she/her]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    They’re saying that your take is so incoherent that you need to develop a foundational understanding of the basics.

                    Before you can learn calculus, you need to learn arithmetic so you don’t end up saying things like 2 != sqrt(4)

              • axont [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                Yeah, you’re right. It’s also important to read Lenin’s works on imperialism to understand modern socialism. It’s important to study Mao as well.

      • alcoholicorn [comrade/them, doe/deer]@hexbear.net
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        1 year ago

        What exactly was wrong with Kruschev’s decision to send the tanks into Hungary to stop the fascist uprising?

        Given the historical context of the literal genocides the US was facilitating in asia and south america at that time, even if you ignore the literal fascist collaborators hijacking the movement and pretend it was just a bunch of liberals fighting for “freedom”, keeping them from falling within the west’s claws would have been justified.

        If your criticism was that the USSR was too heavy handed putting down the fascists, look at what’s happened since.

        • GarbageShoot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          1 year ago

          B-b-but have you heard of Nestor Makhno! Yeah, it’s pretty underground but he was this totally rad anarchist that shot a bunch of tankies (um, somebody call the BASED department!?!?) and was totally productive in doing other things like . . . Stopping some of the people who he armed and trained after they went and committed pogroms and . . . Uh, well, he had a newspaper in France where he totally stuck it to the tankies and also every other leftist around him until he died in near complete social isolation, but . . . Um . . . He helped kill that fascist leader that one time (by being very ineffective in trying to dissuade the Jewish anarchist who actually did kill that fascist).

        • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Words evolve and change in meaning. Calling someone a tankie in 2023 is not a comment on their opinions of an event that happened a lifetime ago.

        • Big Miku@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Let’s take a look what started that “fascist” uprising. Years of economic mismanagement, opression, and being forced to pay a big chunk of their gdp to the Soviets for war reperations were all factors that lead to the Hungarian Revolution.

          And who did these “fascist” pick as their leader? Imre Nagy, the man who was ousted from power by the soviets for having the audacity to be a more moderate communist than hardline stallinists.

          The US doing something bad doesn’t justify someone else doing bad. Think about a nazi who uses that reasoning, they would sound like a nazi apologist.

          Yes, the US did some bad stuff, but I still view them as the lesser evil when compared to the USSR or China.

          Also Hungary doing something 65 years later doesn’t justify the actions of the Soviets.

          • Whether the initial protesters had good reason or not, fascists quickly co-opted the movement in the same way they co-opted the liberal protests in Ukraine.

            Hungary doing something 65 years later doesn’t justify the actions of the Soviets.

            Their actions 65 years later prove there were significant numbers of nazis waiting in the wings, and that the soviets were insufficiently oppressive.

            • Big Miku@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              I couldn’t find a single mention of a fascist movement in the uprising. So either it was neglible in size, or you are just lying.

              “Insufficiently oppressive”. What? Hungary was a really oppressive nation during that time, and you wanted it to be more oppressive?

              And opressive to who? Fascist? They can just lie about not being a fascist. That leaves out to just guess who is a fascist and that sounds like a wonderful time for the citizens.

              Patton really was correct about the Soviet Union.

          • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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            1 year ago

            This basically shows that what you care about is whether someone is anti-west or not. You are a western nationalist. Not a socialist, and certainly not an internationalist.

          • JamesConeZone [they/them]@hexbear.net
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            1 year ago

            How do you differentiate yourself from them as a socialist? What is your theory of power and how it relates to authority, revolutions, and the working class that causes you to make this separation between supporting non-western communist countries and not?

            • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              I never said that I don’t support communist countries. What I do not support are abuses of power by authoritarian leaders, even if they claim to be abusing their power in order to bring about a communist state.

              Tankies accept most/all atrocities committed by so-called communist leaders with a “the ends justify the means” attitude that I do not share.

              • UnicodeHamSic [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                To be fair killing nazis is pretty cool. We made some movies about it.

                It is neat you are a fan of doing things where the ends do not justify the means. How do bathing moral decay like that feel?

                • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  Have you never heard the phrase “the ends justify the means” before? It’s a pretty common phrase.

                  It means that any action, no matter how unethical or morally reprehensible, is acceptable as long as it is done to accomplish a goal that is deemed good.

                  This is the tankie attitude.

                  To reject this means that there are limitations on what actions are acceptable in pursuit of a goal. That there are some actions that are too repugnant to be justified.

                  • UnicodeHamSic [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    That’s correct. I think in the real world that doesn’t come up. What is the hypothetical? would you murder an innocent little girl to save your child. That isn’t a gotcha. That wouldn’t work. Even if it did work, the ends of that is that everyone has to wory about their children being scrapped for spare parts. That logic works under cpaitlaism. That situation infact happens today for capitlaism. There just aren’t situations where if you accurately assess the ends it justifies terrible means. Under capitlaism we do terrible means for terrible ends. We are so used to thinking of that that it us hard to think of alternatives, but your failure of imagination doesn’t make you morally right.

                  • LinkedinLenin [any, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    That’s just thought-terminating. There’s no universal truth that ends do or do not justify means.

                    Is locking up a sex offender to prevent further victimization justifiable? Is taking bread from a store to feed a starving person justifiable? Is banning false advertisement justifiable? Is requiring licensure for medical practice justifiable? Those actions are all means that directly violate some conception of liberal human rights.

                    Additionally, there’s often not a clear delineation, in the real world, between means and ends. The real world is made up of complex networks of powers and interests competing against each other, regardless of what can or cannot be justified. We believe in advancing working class power, interests, and rights, which by definition necessitates undermining the power, interests, and rights of the ruling class and its enforcers/enablers. Within that framework we accept and perform criticisms of the methods used to progress those goals, but only inasmuch as those critiques can help to refine strategy and inform future liberatory movements. Otherwise it’s either carrying water for US interests or squabbling about the moral standing of dead people.

            • Alterecho@midwest.social
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              1 year ago

              I’m sorry, maybe I’m misunderstanding here. I think the delineation between authoritarian regimes and non-authoritarian governments is pretty clear - are you implying that all socialist and communist influenced governments are necessarily authoritarian?

              • JamesConeZone [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                No, I’m suggesting that authoritarian is a meaningless term unless defined specifically and was asking what theories of power and authority they had for making the delineation they are.

                The derogatory term authoritarian is always leveled at socialist or communist countries, and never capitalist ones even though capitalist countries restrict rights for the majority of their populations by the very nature of the inherent power structure in capitalism. Even though communist countries usually enjoy far more decentralised authority, better voting rights, and higher political involvement in the populace, they are labeled as “authoritarian,” the implication being that they need “freedom” aka capitalism

                • PvtGetSum@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  What? The term authoritarian is thrown at non-communist/capitalist nations all the time. Syria, Nazi Germany, Libya, Franco’s Spain, Modern Russia, and a million other instances. Authoritarian is a clearly defined term and is in no way exclusively applied to communist nations in almost any circles. It also happens to have been applied to most “communist” countries because most of them have been authoritarian

                  • JamesConeZone [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    Notice you didn’t name the United States which is just as authoritarian as modern Russia by any definition we choose (voting rights? participation in political process? allowed dissent? access to clean water? basic access to healthcare? food desserts? policies meant to keep people in poverty?). That’s my point. It’s an ethereal term unless properly defined.

                    We’ll have to set Libya aside since after given “freedom,” there are now literal slave traders everywhere.

                  • brain_in_a_box [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    It’s not clearly defined at all; try to give a definition of authoritarianism that applies to all of the countries frequently described as authoritarian, but not to any of the ones that aren’t, and you’ll see how vague a term it is.

                • Alterecho@midwest.social
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                  My guy, that’s an awful lot of assumptions to be making about the general mindset of multiple nations, each of which contains millions of people. Derogatory? I’m pretty sure that authoritarianism has a dictionary definition lol. “Authoritarianism is a political system characterized by the rejection of political plurality, the use of strong central power to preserve the political status quo, and reductions in the rule of law, separation of powers, and democratic voting.” From Wikipedia, just as a quick Google grab.

                  So do you think that, say, WW2 Italy wasn’t authoritarian? Or same-era Japan? Fascist nations are (by the above definition) authoritarian, so that actually includes tons of non-communist nations, both current and historical. Similarly, just because a nation is communist, does not make it magically except from having corrupt, authoritarian government. Id even say that America is well on its way to authoritarianism, and the right/neo-libs continue to salivate over the chance to completely fuck over the common person in exchange for a quick buck.


                  Genuinely, because I’m always looking to learn more; how does capitalism as an economic system inherently restrict rights? My understanding of the core premise is that it turns labor into a conceptual currency that we then use to acquire goods. It’s not, theoretically, at least, inherently oppressive. In practice, it’s been clearly a shit-show that causes more suffering than just about anything else on the planet.

                  As a side note; I’m deeply anti-capitalist, I’m also deeply anti-fascist and anti-authoritarian. I hate the idea that a human being is only worth the utility they provide, and I also hate the idea that oppression is a necessary consequence of an attempt to liberate the people of a nation from hyper-capitalist wagemongering. I’d like to think there’s a world where we can live and not oppress anyone, can genuinely engage in discourse and learn from each other without judgement.

                  • JamesConeZone [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    thanks for the interaction here, and thanks for pushing back. you’re getting at what i was hoping to demonstrate, that all political systems inherently have a system of authoritarianism with the possible exception of anarchism – I don’t know enough about anarchist theory to talk through that and don’t want to be sectarian to my anarchist comrades, but your questions about it would be welcome at hexbear. we have a comm dedicated to theory. Bakunin (one of the big names in anarchist theory) wrote about authority, and Engels replied (he was not a fan). you might like their essays. theory has come a long way since then, but it’s worth looking at some foundational texts. this topic is what caused the marxist-anarchist split.

                    capitalism restricts rights by alienating the working class from the means of production. thus, workers have no say over their labor and have the value of the labour extracted. as more exploitation occurs and wealth imbalance increases, the ruling class will always move to consolidate power to protect their capital and positions in society, which naturally leads to one society of the bourgeouise and another for the labourers. this is at the basical level but it is much wider than this and effects all levels of society, e.g., the bourgeouise control media outlets to prevent ideas from taking root (e.g., newspapers in 1800s-1900s) whilst selling the idea of a “free press.” It means that all aspects of society are not focused on creating products useful for society but on creating products useful to make capitalist money through further exploitation. It needs to feed and crushes all who oppose it, even ideologically.

                    that’s a decent starting point, I think, but yeah come join us at hexbear. you can jump into the theory comms with questions or head to “askchapo” or just jump into the daily mega thread. we’re all nerds over there, so where I don’t know something someone else will jump in

                  • UnicodeHamSic [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    If capitalism isn’t authoritarian why do we spend most of our federal budget on making sure people can’t leave the system?

                    Why does my boss get to decide my hair color?

                    Why is everything in my life dictated by the authority of money. How is living with that authoritarian boot on my neck freedom? I would be less free in a country like Cuba where I can marry who I want and leave my job without losing access to medicine?

                  • A few things to keep in mind in addition to our comrade’s reply:

                    1. I’ve never met or talked online with any tankie who is happy with the fact that the “authoritarian oppression” is necessary. We often just take the position of Marx’s quote “we won’t make excuses for the terror.” You don’t have to want it, but because it’s necessary according to history and theory, we don’t bother with the whole game of waiting for the perfect excuse, because then it’s often too late for a movement.

                    2. The goal of tankies is to also reach that world of no necessary oppression and liberation from it for all through dialectical progression, however long and arduous that task is. We just try to be technical, tactical, and strategic about it. It can seem callous, but it’s a mistake to think we can stay on the emotional/values-only plane of thought while attempting large scale socio-economic changes because the enemies of those changes have a system behind them which fulfills all these tasks with low effort.

                    3. When we say authoritarianism is meaningless, we mean that the dictionary definition you gave is all encompassing at state-level analyses, rendering it meaningless for distinctions. There is no power which doesn’t fulfill all of those conditions (even just a low-level manager performs the contents of that definition, despite the form it takes being small scale. Like “reductions of the rule of law” can be as simple as asking you to do tasks on outside of your contract). The only difference is a vibe created in the mind of the user of the term.

                    4. The end of this authority at societal scale is communism. Countries sometimes called communist are better called socialist countries led by communists or something. The whole discussion is rendered confusing by mistaking a process/movement for some definitional standard. No socialist country is socialist for meeting definitions/conditions; they are socialist because they recognize and continue the process to progression to communism. See point 2 for the strategy which countries led by communists are doing.

                    Come talk with us, we have interesting ideas and people

                • blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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                  All governments are inherently authoritarian by their nature, but there’s a scale and I think in most people’s minds there’s a line.

                  The line is probably drawn where people are prosecuted or even killed when they publicly criticise the ruling regime, where you have to “escape” to simply leave, where there’s a culture of fear that your neighbour or friends or even family could report you for disagreeing with the government. More often than not there’s no way for the public to change the government through democratic means.

                  • axont [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    Ok, but if that’s the case, why are we drawing a line at a nation’s internal population and disregarding their external policies? The USA killed three million people in the War in Iraq, including Iraqis who were very critical of the American presence. The USA has assassinated Latin American presidents for speaking out against the USA and replaced them with more America-friendly dictators. And yet everyone who talks about authoritarianism doesn’t include western nations in their discussion, they instead make up a cartoon idea of what countries outside the west are like. Your definition of what is or isn’t tankie/authoritarian has some kind of nationalist bias built into it.

                    Every time someone describes what authoritarianism is, it makes me think that America and the EU are the worst perpetrators of this behavior, but they mainly export all their violence rather than use the worst of it domestically. Domestically they use private sector means to distribute violence, such as poverty, prisons, and the facilitation of ambient racism.

                    This reminds me of the dividing line that liberals use, which is when they say things like “that dictator killed HIS OWN PEOPLE.” As if killing people externally is more excusable crime?

                • Alterecho@midwest.social
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                  I don’t know if there is such a thing as a perfectly free, truly democratic society wherein everyone is capable of existing free of oppression lol, but I think there’s definitely a spectrum of authoritarian policy and sentiment, often correlated with nationalist and fascist fervor.

                  I may, as a person of color, experience more oppression in a country where I do not fit the standard vision of what a citizen looks like, and less in a country wherein which I do meet that criteria. That’s usually more an issue with nationalist rhetoric than systems of governance - unless that nationalism is codified and enforced by the government, which is the case in many governments that I would consider “more authoritarian.” America is one that has tended towards that, historically. Certainly, though, there are others that have also instituted systems explicitly designed to oppress.

                  I’d say, in general, I have many rights and privileges in current-day America that a truly authoritarian government wouldn’t allow. And that’s not to say that I think America is the greatest, or even good lmao. We’re constantly on the verge of disenfranchisement, and the fact that we’re constantly fighting for things that should be just baseline isn’t exactly a good look. But, in all, I’m allowed to openly state my thoughts in the court of public opinion, I’m able to vote to elect a representative, able to practice religion as I’d like, etc.

                  For sure, the validity of all of that is affected deeply by the corruption of capital in those arenas, but there’s something to be said about the power to openly share ideas and influence fellow citizens without active censorship. Keeping in mind things like COINTELPRO and Fred Hampton, etc, I obviously can’t say in good conscience that the government has never censored it’s citizens, but the purported adherence to the first amendment and being “the land of the free” at least makes them work for it.

                  Sorry for the novel lol. It’s a complicated subject and there’s a lot of nuance to try and tease out

                • Alterecho@midwest.social
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                  1 year ago

                  I think the dictionary definition is as I mentioned in a below comment, but the colloquial meaning has more to do with censorship by the government and restrictions on freedoms than go beyond those necessary for the health and welfare of other citizens.

                  • GarbageShoot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    that go beyond those necessary for the health and welfare of other citizens.

                    What do you think of Chile under Allende? Do you think it met this standard?

              • GarbageShoot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                I believe they are suggesting that, if “authoritarian” means anything, that every large state that has ever existed was “authoritarian,” though some diffuse the authority through things like enclosure of the commons combined with strict property laws or other, older methods like religious law.

                • Alterecho@midwest.social
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                  1 year ago

                  That’s fair- where the line of “authoritarianism” is drawn depends on historic, social, and economic context. I think modern colloquial usage is certainly shaped by western values, simply because America’s primary export is culture, and that’s what happens when you shout loud enough over enough time.

            • LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              See that’s the thing: the fact that the west lies doesn’t mean that the east tells the truth. You are heavily skeptical of what the west has to say (good) but mostly uncritical of what any communist government has to say (bad).

              Capitalist countries have done horrible things, but so have self-proclaimed communist countries

              • UnicodeHamSic [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                I have entire history books about how the west lies.

                There is not a similar body of data about the loss of the east. Is it perfect? No. Do we have any reason to belive they are as bad or bad in the same kind of way as the people who oppose them? No.

                • Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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                  1 year ago

                  General note: Most authors publishing critical material of the west in the (free speech) west don’t get silenced (edit: although professional blacklisting is all too common). Yes, I’m sure there are exceptions. You might not want to do that openly in China, Iran, or Russia these days, because the risks are well known/accepted. It definitely makes life harder for scholars and historians.

                  • UnicodeHamSic [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    Do you have any evidence of China suppressing criticism? We know the western media openly brags about making up stories about the east.

                    I can find plenty of stories of publishing houses declining to publish material. That is effectively censorship but because it is done by a company we don’t care

                    Russia and Iran are more like the US than China so considering them as one unit is not helpful.

    • seitanic@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      That isn’t how Lenny works, though. Anybody can fire up an instance for any type of community. They could be pro-socialist, anti-socialist, liberals, Nazis, goldfish fanciers…you name it. If you don’t like them, you can defederate from them.

      • Hexadecimalkink@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        For sure totally agree. So why do the goldfish fancies keep making memes making fun of another community? Why don’t they just defederate?

    • cristo@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      This forum isnt entirely made up of socialists, pretty reddit tier attitude to think that