• @[email protected]
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    10011 months ago

    ITT:

    Everyone thinking that the only two options are being quiet or being violent.

    Strikes are currently making those in power very uncomfortable, and are resulting in genuine progress for workers.

    In my area, people camping out in thousand year old trees has protected them time and again from being illegally logged.

    Black Lives Matter protests were loud and made the powerful uncomfortable, and despite media narratives it wasn’t “violent protesters” that made the powerful uncomfortable.

    It is true that any form of protest that is loud and inconveniencing enough to actually be productive will be met with state violence.

    It’s also true that some working for progress do use violence. But make no mistake, it’s not guns that made those in power uncomfortable when it came to Malcom X and the Black Panthers.

    The most radical and intimidating (to those in power) things the Black Panthers did were to give free food to schoolchildren, and free healthcare at their People’s Free Medical Clinics.

    Building community and mutual aid is subversive.

    Building community and mutual aid makes those in power uncomfortable.

    • Alien Nathan Edward
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      3211 months ago

      Building community and mutual aid is subversive.

      This. Both the government and the major corporations depend on being able to extract wealth from real people getting what they need. If we build dual power structures, help one another out and cut the owner class out of the transaction entirely, we weaken them. Growing food in your garden is revolutionary. Clothing swaps are revolutionary. Cutting the old lady next door’s lawn, then eating the soup she made is an act that strikes at the fundamental underpinnings of the power structure set up by those who think that they should be entitled to our labor because they’ve been arbitrarily designated as the “owners” of things. We can and should remove them from the equation entirely.

    • @Cookiesandcreamclouds
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      2011 months ago

      Why wasn’t I taught about the free food and medical care part of what they did?

      • @RememberTheApollo_
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        1911 months ago

        You were quietly taught that armed black people were scary. That’s what they wanted you to remember, not what they armed themselves for.

        • @Cookiesandcreamclouds
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          611 months ago

          Ugh… this just makes me feel all sorts of awful. I struggle to find the exact words.

          • @[email protected]
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            511 months ago

            “Lied to” are two good ones.

            Just remember it is not your fault. Society has so deeply propagandized Americans over the years that I don’t know if it’s even possible to fix it.

      • LucasWaffyWaf
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        111 months ago

        Shit, at least you were taught about them. Never even heard about the Black Panthers until later in my adult life on a random reddit comment.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 months ago

      Building community and mutual aid makes those in power uncomfortable.

      Small mutual aid for local communities grow out into large social aid organizations that have political power. Politicians can make them redundant by unemployment, healthcare and pensions, or try to nip them in the bud.

  • @pigup
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    3811 months ago

    Squeaky wheel gets the grease

    • Th4tGuyII
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      1111 months ago

      Exactly. The louder and more obnoxious you are, particularly towards those in power, the more likely they are to actually listen, even if just to get you to fuck off

    • RBG
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      111 months ago

      That sounds dirtier than it should be.

  • @[email protected]
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    3611 months ago

    The entirety of history also shows that a whole lot of people need to be ready to die for the cause for social change to happen.

    So, still feeling up for it?

    • @[email protected]
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      2911 months ago

      That is the question:

      live in an unjust and amoral society

      or die trying to make a righteous one.

      The stoics, at least Seneca, opted for the former.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          Seneca was one of the wealthiest Romans of his time.

          He more than 99% of the Empire had a choice. He happened to be rich and choose status quo. Who ever would have guessed that ?

      • @psycho_driver
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        -211 months ago

        or die trying to make a righteous one.

        . . . and realize that your new, righteous society will quickly collapse into corruption and amorality because a society is filled with people.

        • @sheogorath
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          211 months ago

          The best way is to just nuke each other to oblivion then.

    • Promethiel
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      2211 months ago

      Far more people than you seem to think so are feeling up to it, risk of bodily harm nonwithstanding. That same history shows that whole lots of people do and have gotten that fed up.

      The current challenge imo is the hyperfocused and extremely well funded tools to disorganize and fracture populaces globally.

      They are so abstract, so psychologically targeted and so pervasive that they enable the rise of fascism again even though many of the players are frankly cartoonishly inept (more so than in the past; fascism is cunning and bullish, but seldom clever) to the point that the banality of evil of yesterday is nearly preferable to the bumbling cruelty of today.

      Yes, still feeling up to it, but while the precipice nears, there’s still both time to turn the car around and get ready to violently brake. We’re just careful drivers until there’s a need to maneuver.

    • @Zehzin
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      1711 months ago

      Joke’s on you, I already wish I was dead

    • @agent_flounder
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      511 months ago

      When doing nothing becomes so intolerable and the potential gain is high enough to make the risk of death is worth taking then the answer becomes “yes”. That’s why people don’t take extreme actions easily.

      Putting it another way, if enough people are willing to take big risks, then the status quo must be pretty damned awful in their view.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      a whole lot of people need to be ready to die for the cause for social change to happen.

      For the change to not happen, a whole lot of people need to be ready to keep dying from the status quo. It’s incredible that some people still think a war isn’t being waged when we don’t resist the oppression and exploitation. Here you are implying those who are ready to fight for themselves—and for you!—are your enemies, when your real enemies know the lesson you refuse to learn:

      There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.

      —Warren Buffett

      So, still feeling like leaving us all to continue being slowly murdered as you sit and do nothing?

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          Nope. That’s really not the question, in fact. What a shitty, boring, “utilitarian” view of the struggle for liberation. Why are you even in this community, liberal?

          • @[email protected]
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            011 months ago

            Yes, it’s exactly the question that needs to be asked in relation to my original argument. If people feel that more will die from a revolution than from the status quo then good luck convincing people to increase their chance to die.

            Heck, the fact that we’re here and able to discuss this in the first place shows how spoiled we are even if things aren’t as good as they could be. People that are really poor don’t have a computer or a cellphone to communicate on a niche website.

            People in first world countries are walking with a pebble in their shoe and some are complaining that we need to stop and remove it, the majority doesn’t care when they see people from third world countries walking with a broken foot.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 months ago

              Yes, I get it. Already got it, in fact. But thanks anyway for reporting on yourself.

  • @[email protected]
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    1111 months ago

    Look at the US, they begged England for representation. Even after they gave an ultimatum they begged to stay but it didn’t work and they had a war that France won

  • @[email protected]
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    911 months ago

    It depends on the kind of change you are attempting to make. Revolutionary changes aren’t going to be accomplished without someone getting hurt, but if you are trying to change the name of your town from Lincolnville to Frankville that likely won’t require injury.

  • @psycho_driver
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    911 months ago

    It’s amazing how a perspective can change when one’s head is rolling around on the cobblestone.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 months ago

      It doesn’t have to have a high body count on one side, there aren’t many at the top holding the rest of the world back because they only care about stock prices and shareholder value.

  • @WiLiV
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    -211 months ago

    So the solution is to rear a generation of children who believe violence, riots, revolutions, and coup-d’etat is the solution for social change? Because the big problem you are glossing over is that these changes throughout history essentially all involved violence to some degree.

    • @RGB3x3
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      1511 months ago

      Small progress over time happens through peaceful protest, canvassing, voting, and generally making your voice heard.

      But you can’t vote your way out of authoritarianism. You can’t vote away a broken system that incentivizes those in power to keep it broken. That change has to come with grand action and all at once.

      • @WiLiV
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        -511 months ago

        What “grand action” do you suppose is appropriate in this scenario? I seem to recall some people taking a grand action on January 6, 2021 also. What separates them from you, besides their radically different ideology?

        That’s not the right way.

        • @CADmonkey
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          911 months ago

          You know what? They were misguided and wrong, but at least the Jan 6th wankers did something. Now there are politicians who are afraid to do their jobs because the same sort of people threaten them.

          What has “being better” done for anyone?

          • @WiLiV
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            -411 months ago

            Then what’s the way forward? Jan 6 V2 but this time it’s left wing people instead? Ok, then what? You can storm in and overthrow all the evil geriatrics and install the utopian government of your dreams, but then what do you do about the 50% of constituents who oppose that move?

            The bedrock of democracy is compromise. If you seize power and install a government that works to further your interests and not strike balance between your interests and their interests, you’re an authoritarian in disguise.

            • @[email protected]
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              411 months ago

              Compromise needs two parties, and it depends on perspective. If we put people who organize coups, murderous cops and their enablers, or corporate ghouls imploding our planet while making common people miserable into prison for decades to life, it could be a compromise between not doing that and mobs indiscriminately killing everyone with any kind of authority.

              There are two big problems with violent political measures, one is that if they start, they are very hard to stop, one coup may be followed by three more in the same year, and that the democratic system being made ever weaker by corruption out in the open makes it inevitable.

            • @CADmonkey
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              111 months ago

              Im not willing to compromise with people who want to kill my friends. I don’t know why that’s so hard for so many people, including yourself.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 months ago

              You’re right, we need to kill half of trans people, otherwise we are exercising authority on right wingers /s

              I for one think it is reasonable to exercise authority when someone is trying to oppress others

        • @Specal
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          711 months ago

          Here in the UK they are slowly but surely banning protesting, peaceful and non peaceful. Take away peaceful protesting there only is one way. Like it or not, they don’t want to hear you or your voice, they just want you to rot and die.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          What separates them from you, besides their radically different ideology?

          I hear this in an obnoxious German accent with a nazi being shot by a red army soldier in the background

    • @[email protected]
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      411 months ago

      They’re not glossing over it, nor is it a “big problem”; that’s the whole entire point of the tweet. You can’t defeat tyranny 100% non-violently, period.

      • @WiLiV
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        -411 months ago

        Oh, ok, so then it is in fact an incitement to violence. Isn’t that swell, we aren’t even trying to hide it anymore.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      Liberals think the status quo of capitalist and state oppression isn’t violent. News at 11. yawn

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Eating breakfast won’t force change

      Brushing your teeth won’t, either

      Nor will telling your mother you love her

      Being an anarchist doesn’t mean every action you do has to be praxis

      • Schwim Dandy
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        -1411 months ago

        I’m sure you’re right and OP is out there wreaking havoc on the system.

        • @[email protected]
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          811 months ago

          Did I say they were? I’m just saying you know literally one thing about them. You have zero evidence to prove anything else other than they made a comment here.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      What the fuck are you doing here? Time is money, dude!
      What is your local municipality doing? GO. NOW. HURRY.