That means fuck ECOWAS as a tool of the oppressors also. Critical support for every coup in Africa, and for the rights of Africans to demand the French and US militaries leave their country.

Critical Readings:

  • Neocolonialism by Kwame Nkrumah.
  • How Europe Underdeveloped Africa by Walter Rodney.
  • Rethinking Ownership of Development in Africa by T.D. Harper-Shipman.

Recommended readings:

  • Unsustainable Empire: Alternative Histories of Hawaii Statehood by Dean Itsugi Saranillio.
  • Radical Markets: Uprooting Capitalism and Democracy for a Just Society by Eric A. Posner and E. Glen Weyl.
  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Critical support for every coup in Africa

    Hurr durr Western imperialism bad Russian imperialism good

    Why don’t we get France (a democracy) to pressure their leaders to set up free and fair elections then get the fuck out after they’re done (simplifying things here as it’s a slow process to not create a power vacuum) rather than supporting a like-for-like swap of France for Russia or Chinese control of the country through debt?

    I’m not against the premise of the post, just the caption which reads like mindless Russophilia

    • Hegar
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      171 year ago

      Your comment about Chinese debt is uninformed - China holds a small percentage of total African debt and there’s only 1 country (Zambia, iirc) where Chinese debt is even close to half of the debt.

      Eurobond debt is far greater in almost every debt distressed African nation and is the debt that African leaders and bankers commonly cite as the problem.

      The Chinese debt-trap story keeps being repeated by the US state department, but it does not reflect in any way the reality of African debt.

      https://chinaglobalsouth.com/2023/07/13/graph-of-the-day-chinas-real-share-of-african-debt/

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Oh no, are you having hallucinations? Because last I checked the majority of coups in former French Africa were Russia/Wagner backed so there’s no strawman in sight.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          1 year ago

          You’re advocating for FRANCE to DICTATE TO AFRICAN COUNTRIES HOW THEY CAN BE SOVERIEGN. Do you not see the irony in that statement? When has France ever set up “Free and Fair Elections” in ANY of their vassal states or neo-colonies? Was it a free and fair election when they murdered democratically elected revolutionaries? Was it fair when they dictated the currency and exchange rate for all of their vassals? Who do the people support? Have you even looked? It’s not France lmao.

          • @Darorad
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            191 year ago

            Maybe the coup should hold elections and invite international watchers. The colonial power being bad does not mean any action the subjects take is inherently justified. Each action needs to be morally weighed individually.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              21 year ago

              I could see that, however, what we’ve seen in the past in similar instances, is that the West will dictate who the eligible parties for the elections are, as they (the French and US, among others) did in Vietnam, among other places and times. So I also see why the revolutionary government would be wary of such an event. Especially given the only interactions the west has had with them so far has been to tell them to surrender power by X date or risk military action against them. It doesn’t seem that there’s any particular desire or effort towards anything other than immediate return of the compromised presidency, which clearly isn’t going to happen.

          • @[email protected]
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            101 year ago

            Nice strawman.

            I’m saying that the French people make it be known (as they’re so good at making things known to the government - probably the best in the world) that they don’t want their government to continue abusing their former colonies, then hopefully that gets pushed up the agenda for prospective parties, who then go on to organise a transition to full self rule. If that had happened before we wouldn’t be having this discussion, so not only are you constructing a strawman by using the acts of former French governments against a hypothetical future one, you’re not even destructing it properly as you’re just saying “look this happened before” rather than actually giving reasons as to why your hypothetical future French strawman government would go against the will of their voters to maintain control over their former colonies.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              61 year ago

              So again, you don’t support Africans taking their sovereignty, but you do support French citizens asking their government to give African countries sovereignty.

              Why would the French government vote against the will of their constituency? I don’t know, maybe you should ask them why they forced through that retirement bill earlier this year.

              This all neglects the fact, that it is not the French governments NOR the French peoples right to determine African sovereignty, it is Africans right and theirs alone. I have a feeling you would’ve supported the French over Sankara just because he gained power in a coup.

              • @[email protected]
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                51 year ago

                So again, you don’t support Africans taking their sovereignty, but you do support French citizens asking their government to give African countries sovereignty.

                both have the same result, and if the former is the only option then fine, but the latter certainly results in less death and suffering than a violent coup might

                • @[email protected]OP
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                  91 year ago

                  Well, they’ve had 50 years to surrender their neo-colonies, you can’t fault Africans for getting tired of waiting and seizing their sovereignty themselves. Or you can, but you’d be an idiot.

          • @[email protected]
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            141 year ago

            I meant recent/ongoing, as I imagine the OP did in their caption, but I see how the confusion arose reading the comment in isolation.

            That said, the Soviet Union did do their fair share of meddling in post-colonial Africa so it wouldn’t shock me, but I can’t remember which countries they were involved in off the top of my head so I couldn’t say yes or no with any real confidence

  • Ignacio
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    541 year ago

    Critical support for every coup in Africa, and for the rights of Africans to demand the French and US militaries leave their country.

    No critical support for the rights of Africans to demand the Russian and Wagner militaries leave their country? Because you’re replacing one colonialism with another colonialism. Should I point out that Wagner is paid with African natural resources like diamonds? What is the difference between the exploitation from France and the exploitation from Russia?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      -71 year ago

      I’ve yet to see any evidence of Wagner interference in these coups, and in fact, the countries they’ve been taking place in most recently have been countries with heavy western military presence, not Wagner. Not to mention, the suggestion that Africans are not capable of performing a coup themselves to me smells of paternalism, but that may not be your implication and I’m sorry if I misinterpreted it.

      • Ignacio
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        171 year ago

        I’m not talking about them performing a coup. Although I don’t like coups, they’re property of nobody but themselves, and eventually democracy will return.

        But French troops doing bad stuff, or doing neither bad nor good stuff (that’s doing nothing at all), that doesn’t mean they should be replaced by another foreign nation troops, being either private or not. If we agree that African nations are sovereign enough to decide their own future, they’re also sovereign enough to defend themselves, or to ask for help to neighbouring countries in exchange of nothing. But in the countries we’re talking about, they asked for help to another potential colonial nation in exchange of natural resources, that could be manufactured in place, thus creating employment, wealth and other benefits.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          31 year ago

          That’s a perspective I can understand. I was pretty disappointed to see Wagner given a mine in Burkina Faso, for sure.

          I think, though, that unfortunately, it is an inevitable consequence of western reaction to the coups and their history of suppressing African sovereignty.

          Fighting off jihadis(which is what Wagner is being contracted to do in Burkina Faso) is a global problem, and can’t be tackled by any one nation, especially not a poor, landlocked one like Burkina Faso. However, the wests actions in fighting Islamic extremism in Africa has been so heavily fraught with abuse of Africans among other issues that I don’t think we’ll ever see the return of trust between West Africa and the West, and so, when paired with the global Wests refusal to work with the coup governments, and tendency to issue sanctions which even further damage civilian populations while leaving governmental structures nearly untouched (and not to mention that sanctions have been definitively proven to increase support for a regime), the newly free African nations have no choice but to look to alternative economic blocs for support, and in our current world, that alternative block is essentially just Russia.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        https://archive.ph/0xLUh

        Not a successful coup but rather the planning of a coup. About the recent coups, there’s somewhat of a lack of information. Time will tell whether Wagner was influencing the coups. What is obvious is Wagner is certainly supported by a large portion of the population, seeing as there’s Wagner flags everywhere.

        Then there’s also Russia + Wagner attempting to gain control over Moldova

        • @[email protected]OP
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          1 year ago

          I see a few Russian flags indeed, thanks for the link. Importantly, what I don’t see, are Russians. Hong Kong protestors carried US flags, but I don’t think many people think that the US orchestrated them, we’ve seen similar across the world in various times and places. I’m not sure why they’re waving Russian flags, but I sure would love to ask them. Maybe I’ll talk to my Ghanaian friends and see if they have any experience with support for Russia in their nation, but last I heard, he hated Russia and China as much as he hates France, and more than he hates the US.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              21 year ago

              That’s very true. Nearly all major nations employ cyber-criminals in other countries to spread narratives and control dissent. I don’t see why Africa would be any different in being targeted. I’m pretty involved in local Ghanaian affairs through local Ghanaian friends and family, and I’ve yet to see anything suggesting he or his support Russia, but it’s such a small sample size from only one country, I hesitate to use it as evidence for or against anything. He does support the coup though, and he’s even more angry at ECOWAS than I am, and his own government which he believes is gearing up for war.

              I’ll ask him what he thinks of Russia though, I don’t think I’ve ever directly broached the subject with him.

  • @Zoboomafoo
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    261 year ago

    Bold claim, mind backing it up with a source?

  • @[email protected]
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    251 year ago

    what is tankie propaganda doing on my tankie-free community, go away to lemmygrad with this shit

    • @[email protected]OP
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      1 year ago

      Supporting popular uprisings against neocolonial compradore regimes is tankie propaganda now? I’ll be sure to tell my entire Food Not Bombs group they’re all tankies, and that we can no longer practice anarchism anymore because some guy on lemmy says we’re tankies because we support the right of the African people to self-determine.

      What praxis groups are you a member of that support the ousted government despite the popular support for the coups? I’d be interested in knowing, so I can be sure to never give material support to such a reactionary organization.

      Edit: Also, two comments in three months, only one of which (this one) in 196. For being your community, you sure contribute a lot less than I and many others do.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        you sound like you’re in dire need of a shower and a grass touching session

        as per your edit, i’m shy and also have better things to do than having twitter level discourse with annoying anarchists that whine about western imperialism while suspiciously getting defensive about russian influence in recent military coups (not popular uprisings) :^)

        • @[email protected]OP
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          11 year ago

          I definitely could use a shower, I woke up late today, but I touch grass every day on my way to feed the chickens before I go to work for the day, thanks for your concern. Usually I’m wearing shoes, but I’ve been trying to toughen the soles of my feet recently, so I go barefoot basically anytime I’m at home.

  • @TotallynotJessica
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    Colonialism bad, but this post sets off too many red flags. Critical support to all coups? Critical support too often means silencing of valid criticisms. I’ve only ever seen people using that term unironically if they believe things like democratic centralism are a good idea. Some coups make things better, some make thingd worse. Some could even allow reactionaries to gain power or result in neocolonialists gaining more control.

    Also, that Radical Markets book is fishy. Posner seems like a sleazy neoliberal and while Weyl has a point with quadratic voting, I don’t want that applied to the government. I think that we should redistribute excess capital held by private individuals to the people evenly so that no single individuals can wield power without having it given willingly.

    Edit: grammar

    Edit 2: God I’m tired.

    • cacheson
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      C’mon now. You may find BartsBigBugBag annoying, and “critical support” is kind of sus, but they’re not anywhere near hexbear’s level:

      • There’s been no assertions here that anyone should end up “against the wall”.
      • From what I’ve seen BBBB tends to argue mostly alone against a larger audience. Hexbears intentionally show up en masse to overwhelm their opposition.
      • BBBB’s arguments appear to be genuine. At the very least, they’re not flooding the thread with annoying image macros and pictures of pig shit.
  • @Potatos_are_not_friends
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    81 year ago

    Wow! I never learned about this!

    France and the US… Murdering our neighbors… Destabilizing foreign countries… All learning from the lessons from the UK.

  • @[email protected]
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    For those asking for lists/sources, I did a quick duckduckgo search and here is the first thing I got. Just taking a quick glance and seeing Gaddafi on the list leads me to believe the claim is at least slightly dubious. Yeah, sure, France was involved in that revolution, but his death at the hands of his own countrymen was immortalized in a snuff film you don’t wanna watch.

    https://www.africanexponent.com/post/10487-france-has-always-carried-evil-imperialism-with-it

    • @LaChaleurDeLaNuit
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      11 year ago

      People need to have a bad guy to point their finger at. And trust me, as a French-Israeli citizen I know what I’m talking about 😬 Folks will give a lot of moral and life lessons before sweeping their front door first, as we say in french.

      • Baut [she/her] auf.
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        11 year ago

        So uuuh… are you implying that France shouldn’t sweep their dirty front door? Or what’s your point?
        I feel like the post is very clear that the French are being negligent with their front door.

        • @LaChaleurDeLaNuit
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          11 year ago

          No? That’s not a all what I said nor implied. I just think that when you feel entitled enough to preach and give moral lessons to others you better make sure your front door is cleaned. That’s just an opinion, of course you can criticize others without being 100% perfect if you want but I’m just not a big fan of hypocrisy.

  • @iforgotmyinstance
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    Enjoying unprecedented stretches of world peace while simultaneously denigrating the nations which enforce it.

    Imagine being so privileged.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      131 year ago

      When has there been world peace? Or do people in places like Yemen just not count as people to you?