• @TrismegistusMx
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    1 year ago

    Point 1: This is your one strike for you to define my arguments in defiance of my words. I will just block you the next time YOU decide what I know.

    I’m not using Nazi as a synonym for evil. Evil is subjective and nebulous. Evil is an illusion. Nazis believe that all of their victims are evil. It’s the ultimate projection of their own ignorance. I’ve already told you that Nazis are emblematic of malignant authority, which always manifests in the same way; the deification of the hierarchy of authority resulting in self justification of acts against individuals to perpetuate its own existence. What would I call malignant authoritarians prior to 1900? I’d still call them Nazis. What people hate about Nazis is that their genocide was undeniable. Most are perfectly OK with prisons, wars, and slavery as long as it serves their own comfort. “Nobody panics when things are going according to plan, even if that plan is horrific.” If you insist on a historical definition, I would consent to “Mammon Worshippers,” as they were known in the time of Christ: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammon

    Point 2: Your denial doesn’t change reality. Whether you’re being honest about growing up in Gaza or not, when authority decides where dissidents can live with walls, borders, or laws, they’ve created a prison. When authority decides that it can use violence to enforce a prison, it enacts a genocide in the prison, which is now a concentration camp.

    Point 3: You are free to disagree, but again I iterate that by adhering to the definitions enforced by Nazis you are expanding their influence and validating their narratives. Authority ALWAYS depends on pretence to establish in-groups and out-groups. It ALWAYS hollows out the individual until nothing but a murderous and obedient drone remains, and if it fails, it always throws the “degenerate” into the slave camps.