• Flying Squid
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    132 hours ago

    Smedley Butler’s healthy distrust of those in power was developed at an early age when his parents named him Smedley.

    • @DaMonsterKnees
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      339 minutes ago

      Heh, sometimes you learn by seeing what wrong looks like. Well put, Squid!

  • @Fredselfish
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    1078 hours ago

    So they didn’t prosecute a single individual in this attempt. Guess our government as always allowed insurrection go unpunished in our country. Just like Trump and his J6th people.

    • @Stovetop
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      987 hours ago

      Even better, it allowed for a political dynasty to come from it anyways. Prescott Bush, the father of George H. W Bush and grandfather of George W. Bush and Jeb Bush, was one of the parties involved with the Business Plot, and the Bushes seemed to do a fine job carrying on his legacy.

      • @Lost_My_Mind
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        62 hours ago

        Stop making me sad sir! I see you reciting facts, and putting reality on full display. This only means that it doesn’t matter what we do, fascism will always be a lurking and sometimes more than lurking threat. Even if you stop it’s current plans, it’s always there, unpunished, ready to rear it’s ugly head in future generations.

        STOP MAKING ME SAD, SIR!!!

    • sunzu2
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      267 hours ago

      When the powerful people do it, the state will protect them while socialists got the rope for essentially shit posting because the plebs liked it a bit too much.

    • @RegalPotoo
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      -86 hours ago

      They didn’t prosecute anyone because there was essentially no evidence beyond the accusation of one man, and even then no-one was accused of doing anything beyond talking about it

      • @TankovayaDiviziya
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        127 minutes ago

        Found a conspirator.

        Although seriously, it’s mentioned in the Wikipedia article that the investigating committee said there is strong evidence of the plotting. They didn’t prosecute anyone becaus of course rich people won’t be prosecuted. I have read rumours that Franklin Roosevelt may have made some backroom deal.

  • @[email protected]
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    347 hours ago

    Smedley Butler was a hero on so many levels, a modern day Cincinnatus. He proved himself in battle again and again, and the rich and powerful offered him a throne. He turned it down, because he was a decent man. A man of conscience.

    • @DaMonsterKnees
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      141 minutes ago

      Truth, and it invokes fond memories of some of my favorite Bean books, although Orson Scott Card can go fuck himself.

  • @dr_scientist
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    146 hours ago

    I remember learning about this as a kid from, of all places, a 1976 detective show called City of Angels (starring Wayne Rogers). Ten-year-old me thought it was so cool they would even broach such a topic on TV. As ways to become radicalised go …

    • @HikermickOP
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      45 hours ago

      Huh that’s really interesting. I had heard of Smedley Butler but was unaware of the plot until I watched the movie Amsterdam. It doesn’t pretend to be an accurate depiction, even the names are changed but the coup attempt is the same

  • Get_Off_My_WLAN
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    187 hours ago

    Major General Smedley Butler seemed like a fairly respectable guy. He was like the worst choice the Wall Street plotters could’ve picked. The man had already been denouncing capitalism and Wall Street, so of course he testified to Congress when rich people tried to get him to overthrow democracy.

    • @TankovayaDiviziya
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      122 minutes ago

      Very strange indeed to pick Smedley. But actually like with many secret plots, if you go into the details, the conspirators can be surprisingly inept. The December plot to overthrow the Russian tsardom and replace it with a republic comes to mind. It failed because of lack of coordination, communication, and one of the major co-conspirators lost his nerve at the last minute and thus did not add numbers to the troops of rebels. There was plenty of idealism but it lacked the nerves and good plan execution.