• @[email protected]
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      -110 months ago

      What’s your point exactly? I’m not reading some poorly written 10,000 word essay to try to figure out what you’re wanting to say.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        So it’s actually a pretty interesting read but I think this paragraph gets the idea across pretty well:

        (Obv out of context)

        Most current antisemitism in Eastern Europe is closely related to these debates, as nationalists strive to “fix” their nations’ collaboration (or in the case of the Baltics and Ukraine, participation) in the Holocaust with revised paradigms that equal everything out. One of the poisons of ultranationalism is the perceived need to construct a perfect history (no country on the planet has one of those). Another is hatred of local Jewish communities who have memory, or family, or collective memory, of nationalist neighbors turning viciously on their neighbors in 1941, and of the Soviets being responsible for their own grandparents or parents being saved from the Holocaust. In America, this would be akin to someone hating African Americans for having a different opinion of Washington or Jefferson because they were slaveholders.

      • @[email protected]
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        010 months ago

        A Jewish linguist/historian/activist talking about how equating the Soviets and the Nazis is rhetoric used to justify current and past antisemitism including holocaust collaboration.

        • @[email protected]
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          110 months ago

          Ah, so it’s being used as chud fud.

          My comparison of the two stems from their harsh authoritarian/totalitarian nature as seen from an anarchist lens, nothing to do with genocide.

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            Yeah so the thing is you’re still doing it, the whole “authoritarian” thing is another way of doing a false equivalence between the two.

            If you want to do an anarchist critique compare the USSR to bourgeoise democracies, it is a closer comparison.

            • @[email protected]
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              010 months ago

              To do so would be to ignore the worst elements of the USSR, so I don’t know why I would do that.

              • @[email protected]
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                010 months ago

                You don’t know a lot of the history of bourgeois democracies if you think you can’t compare the worst the USSR has done with what bourgeois democracies have done.

                Maybe you’d want to do it to stop taking part in holocaust trivialization, but you also insulted the Dovid Katz essay so IDK.

                • @[email protected]
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                  10 months ago

                  Maybe you want to drop the fud and trying to inject the holocaust into a comparison as means to discredit a point when it was never made in the first place. There’s no defending the USSR or ML, so I’m not going to bite and engage in an argument designed to downplay the evils of it.

                  And that essay was utter wank filled with needlessly gratuitous language that languished on for countless paragraphs. It easily could have been condensed into a paragraph or two with some historical examples thrown in to justify the argument.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    10 months ago

                    There’s no defending the USSR or ML, so I’m not going to bite and engage in an argument designed to downplay the evils of it.

                    Lol, yes there is, and it is a very simple argument:

                    1. A transitional state moving towards communism is less violent than a capitalist state.

                    2. All large anarchist attempts at governing were basically the same as the USSR under war socialism(Catalonia, which started much more industrialized, and lost, because of, among other things, anarchist organizational failure) or worse (free state of Ukraine, which led to a wave of pogroms because they refused to suppress reactionary elements))