• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    13
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    The annoying thing is these people never see themselves as the insufferable bores always taking about local politics.

    It’s always really important.

    It’s always that you’re a nazi if you don’t agree.

    It’s just modern born-again Christians, who aren’t knocking on your door, they’re posting in your social Media.

    • CheezyWeezle
      link
      -71 year ago

      Well, when you realize that most of the radical communists on here truly believe that there must be an eternal struggle working towards communism but never actually achieving the goal, it makes sense why they are the way they are.

      Literally had one of them tell me that is beyond unrealistic to expect any state to be able to even implement Socialism to any real degree. Of course, in Marxism a Socialist state must exist before withering away as Communism is fully realized, so they will literally admit that their philosophy is impossible to achieve.

      They fetishize the struggle; they don’t actually want progress, they want to complain.

      • JackbyDev
        link
        fedilink
        English
        61 year ago

        Why do you find it shocking that someone wants their political goals to be achieved but is also realistic with themselves that they may never see them accomplished?

        • CheezyWeezle
          link
          01 year ago

          If you accept that your goals cannot be accomplished, why maintain them as goals? If you know it is futile, why bother? It is literally a waste of time at that point.

          That said, I personally dont think it is futile. I think it mostly is an attainable goal, minus the withering of the state; I don’t think we could reach a point where the state is completely unnecessary, so I advocate Socialism. I just also think it is ridiculous that someone would try and claim something is futile while simultaneously advocating that everyone adhere to that thing. Their philosophy states clearly attainable, objective goals. If they think it is unrealistic for anyone to ever achieve those goals, then they don’t believe in their own philosophy. That is textbook cognitive dissonance.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            11 year ago

            Communism is very utopian and it is not well defined about how it would work in a practical or thoeretical sense (AFAIK). It is something to aspire to. Something to guide your path. One day, something like it may be achieved, but will take a long time to get there. Like, say, carbon neutrality, the “pursuit of happiness,” the elimination of world hunger, to be like Jesus and to not sin, to have pyramids built, etc. It’s a fairly common concept.

          • JackbyDev
            link
            fedilink
            English
            0
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            That’s not cognitive dissonance. Cognitive dissonance is the feeling of discomfort one may feel when holding contradictory beliefs and forced to reconcile the two.

            Edit: spelling

            • CheezyWeezle
              link
              31 year ago

              cog·ni·tive dis·so·nance /ˈkäɡnədiv ˈdisənəns/ noun PSYCHOLOGY the state of having inconsistent thoughts, beliefs, or attitudes, especially as relating to behavioral decisions and attitude change

              Nothing to do with a feeling of discomfort or reconciling the beliefs. Not sure where you got that idea from.

                • CheezyWeezle
                  link
                  21 year ago

                  No, that is literally a dictionary definition, not a colloquialism. A colloquialism would necessarily be informal and descriptive, not prescriptive.

                  • JackbyDev
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    01 year ago

                    You think dictionary definitions can’t be descriptive?

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                01 year ago

                wrong. lexicographers are not the authority on a word’s meaning. the definitions they provide are necessarily descriptive of the way words are or have been used, and say nothing about the actual meaning of the word. jackbydev got it right.

                • CheezyWeezle
                  link
                  11 year ago

                  Wrong. By your logic, no words can ever have a meaning, because as soon as you write it down it becomes a definition which you say has nothing to do with the meaning of a word. Your logic is also just objectively wrong. You really think there has never been a prescriptive definition for a word? You really think every single dictionary writer is going out and interviewing every single person to utter a word and making sure that they only define it in the way that they have heard it used? What an asinine line of thought.

                  You both got it wrong.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        21 year ago

        Not to agree with statism, but it sounds like you’re combining the incompatible beliefs of two different people.

        • CheezyWeezle
          link
          -21 year ago

          Lmao downvoted because I guess people don’t believe me? Here is the thread I’m referring to

        • CheezyWeezle
          link
          -41 year ago

          It sure does sound that way, because those people are ripe with cognitive dissonance.

        • CheezyWeezle
          link
          11 year ago

          You should go back to your quotes, its pretty obvious that we are discussing the idea of holding a belief while simultaneously categorizing that belief as impossible.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        11 year ago

        They fetishize the struggle; they don’t actually want progress, they want to complain.

        In the past they were sitting in cafes across Europe, chain smoking and writing pamphlets.