Not unlike this thread, or forum, as a whole
true, except for me, I am watertight.
Not unlike this thread, or forum, as a whole
I opened your Trotsky text in a new tab almost instantly. Is that bona fide enough for you?
exactly, there is the problem.
Get more friends outside of the left.
Uh... Im honestly unclear as to what groups you are referring to? I thought you meant liberal types who put a flag on their social media and take a few selfies in a keffiyeh, but these are all good examples of actual praxis with potential real world consequences?Reposting stories and donating to mutual aid funds, or doing Weatherman-style soft terrorism, i.e., the kinds of activism we were criticizing, is not equivalent to being a doctor. And its not at all uncommon to hear people take issue with doctors’ inflated pay and warped incentive structures. The problem isn’t that deriving personal gratification sullies an otherwise ethical act. It’s that in the ideological backwater of the American Left, personal ethics has basically eclipsed political judgment completely. Feeling good and getting into heaven (and the inevitable social policing that comes along with those) aren’t only byproducts, they’re the main event.
Co-workers and family members, sure. Discriminating against left-leaning politics when making friends? Worse than “anti-leftism,” that sounds like computer-assisted sociopathy
Most of my friends have left leaning politics. they're still politically liberal morons though. I don't go at them for it though because why bother? It isn't going to galvanise the working class struggle for me to constantly criticise them for acting like gangsta rap fetishists.
And more importantly, their views on hamas are irrelevant. Like some queer and trans people support hamas on twitter, so what? This idea that queer people are inherently revolutionary needs to die. Neither are black or brown people. Being a revolutionary or a pro-revolutionary requires work, not of ratio of effort to profit, but tireless reconstruction and restoration of class doctrine and the ascertaining of the class truth.
Uh... Im honestly unclear as to what groups you are referring to? I thought you meant liberal types who put a flag on their social media and take a few selfies in a keffiyeh, but these are all good examples of actual praxis with potential real world consequences?
There's people in the US currently being expelled from schools and fired from jobs for posting pro-Palestinian stuff online. Mutual aid funds are one of the foundations of social solidarity, and soft-terrorism (not sure what this is supposed to mean, but I assume its referring to civil disobedience, roadblocks etc?) comes with the very real risk of arrest and imprisonment. Thats a lot of grief to go through for not much clout.
Regardless, in any large group of people there's gonna be a wide range of motivations for why people do what they do - its why I mentioned medicine - have you ever met a neurosurgeon? From my experience, they are insanely egotistical, motivated by a god-complex as much as a desire to heal, and yet they save countless lives every year. Given the scale of atrocity in Gaza and the west's complicity in the sheer horror of whats happening I could care less about some vague critique of some nebulously defined group, in fact at this stage Id be more concerned about people who aren't somehow signalling their opposition to Israel.
Co-workers and family members, sure. Discriminating against left-leaning politics when making friends? Worse than “anti-leftism,” that sounds like computer-assisted sociopathy
If so many young people who would otherwise aspire to a liberatory politics are so devoid of principle as to not merely sympathize with Hamas on a moral or emotional level, but champion them as a progressive historical force and aesthetically relish in their image, yes, I’d say that’s relevant for working class politics. For one, most working class people don’t base their personalities around loathing their American identity. One reason being is that they simply don’t have the time. What’s more, I’m not sure how you’ll succeed in making any of these young people see the point of the working class becoming organized, since what primarily animates them is a conceited, half-hearted hatred of Western civilization.Most of my friends have left leaning politics. they're still politically liberal morons though. I don't go at them for it though because why bother? It isn't going to galvanise the working class struggle for me to constantly criticise them for acting like gangsta rap fetishists.
And more importantly, their views on hamas are irrelevant.
It's you that's pushing that line; I think you should demand more of themIn which case, why place any moral imperative on them to do anything at all? Terrorists gonna terrorise, right?
@thirdform I shared the article because it was thought-provoking, and many of the truths it broaches are taboo. So even though defining a position on the conflict specific to Platypus is of zero interest to me, can you point me to where a member/representative of Platypus has endorsed a two-state solution? As far as I know, voices from their camp have all been pro one state
If so many young people who would otherwise aspire to a liberatory politics are so devoid of principle as to not merely sympathize with Hamas on a moral or emotional level, but champion them as a progressive historical force and aesthetically relish in their image, yes, I’d say that’s relevant for working class politics. For one, most working class people don’t base their personalities around loathing their American identity. One reason being is that they simply don’t have the time. What’s more, I’m not sure how you’ll succeed in making any of these young people see the point of the working class becoming organized, since what primarily animates them is a conceited, half-hearted hatred of Western civilization.
And although it too often appears in such a guise, creating space for thought and ideology critique is not the same as succumbing to the petty urge to chide your personal milieu, by the way.
You’re really going to quibble with that adjective? I never mentioned “the liberation of the person,” so what good reason does one have not to think in terms of people being liberated from a class society into a classless one? “The workers have nothing to lose but their chains.” I understand you see me as mistaken and ignorant (sorry your monolithic Bordiga citations go over my head), but that just seems like cheap semantics.fuck liberatory politics.
Communism is the integration of individuals into a humane and classless society, not the liberation of the person
You’re really going to quibble with that adjective? I never mentioned “the liberation of the person,” so what good reason does one have not to think in terms of people being liberated from a class society into a classless one? “The workers have nothing to lose but their chains.” I understand you see me as mistaken and ignorant (sorry your monolithic Bordiga citations go over my head), but that just seems like cheap semantics.