Spyke
lemmy.world

I honestly don't know if Americans have what it takes to change the path we're headed down. I haven't really got much faith left in our society. We're pretty pathetic.

Hope I'm wrong.

182
DarkGamerreply
fedia.io

With all the uneducated, divisive disinformation, and faith-based worldviews out there it's hard to even get people to agree that a problem exists, and therefore even harder to convince the electorate how to appropriately address it. Public medicine would fix this problem like it has in the rest of the world yet still many Americans believe it's Marxism for some stupid reason.

70

Public medicine would fix this problem like it has in the rest of the world yet still many Americans believe it's Marxism for some stupid reason.

…because a group of politicians who need campaign funding to stay elected tell them “government bad” at every opportunity.

There is one party to blame here. Republicans. They made up the death panels bullshit. They made it so Lieberman could filibuster for the big insurance companies and keep them rich. They made it a goal to “own the libs.”

Democrats deserve criticism for their Neo Liberal bullshit too, but this wouldn’t have been pushed this far without the Republican propaganda and lies.

13

I think at this point it's clear that there are problems to most people. The difficulty is more about agreeing on a) what the problems are and b) why they are problems, and c) how to fix them.

With the added difficulty that a decent portion of people have taken the "it's hard to prove anything definitively" stance and for some reason decided that means they should believe alternative sources rather than the more logical "be skeptical of everything but also be rational about it". If someone is able to get disinformation into official sources, they'll have an even easier time getting it into alternative sources.

The enemy of your enemy is not necessarily your friend.

2
lemmynsfw.com

Yeah there's 350 million of us but only one of these incidents in the decade+ since Occupy Wall Street?

We don't have the guts.

24
jaredreply
mander.xyz

All we can do it keep moving forward and try to take care of each other as we go.

19
where_am_ireply
sh.itjust.works

Are you shooting down CEOs? No? Then you're part of the problem with being pathetically weak.

0
pachristreply
lemmy.world

Friendly reminder that killing CEOs isn't the only answer. Sometimes it's throwing tea in a harbor. Or tarring and feathering a tax collector.

Just do your part.

10

All those things are from a past where democracy wasn't a thing and indeed you needed to uprise to an oppressive power.

This is still the case for the majority of the planet.

It is not the case in the developed nations. And even in the US Trump has won the popular vote.

You feathering a tax collector is an act against the will of the majority. This is not a revolutionary act, because you're not acting brave and sacrificing yourself to voice a majority's opinion.

Contrary, your actions are radical activism. You represent a minority, and yet you so firmly believe in your own righteousness that you justify violence.

-3
lemmy.world

We’re pretty pathetic.

I'm not some flag saluting, Lee Greenwood asshole, but you couldn't be more wrong. You are on Earth and the truth is 5 billion light years from you wondering about your existence. Americans may not all have the best education. They may be apathetic at the polls due to distrust in the system. However, Americans are NOT pathetic. The media may have you convinced that we are divided on the left and the right, but we are divided up and down. You start to take away things and I'm sure you will find out how strong they can be. Americans have fought and will fight tooth and nail for what they believe in.

-24
DarkFuturereply
lemmy.world

Americans are NOT pathetic

Buddy, we just RE-ELECTED a convicted felon and rapist who instigated an insurrection and illegally attempted to overturn an election AFTER we already fired him for massively failing, including in regards to the biggest crisis America has experienced since WW2. A guy that has openly stated he is anti-union and worker rights. We can't even get on the same page about healthcare, despite having examples from other first world countries across the globe showing what we could do to better our situation. We targeted black people (still are), then gay people (still are), and now we've moved on to targeting trans people. Wealth disparity is increasing by the year. Billionaires OWN our politics top to bottom.

We're categorically fucking pathetic.

42

I don't think this speaks to how pathetic Americans are, but instead to how much the rich have us under their thumb.

We need to start working against atomization if we want things to get better, and I think this is/was a really good way to bring people together. Talk to the uninformed people in your life, be the healthy opposition to their beliefs that many people dont have. Make them understand who their real enemies are.

It is in the upper classes best interest that we close ourselves off, entering echochambers as we talk about how evil it is for someone to disagree with our own beliefs.

16
lemmy.world

US politics are a ship. They don't turn on a dime. We are headed in a better direction in the grand scheme. Short downturns happen. When Bush was president everyone thought the government was going to become a Christofacist regime. The end of times are not near. If you truly believe there is no hope, then why aren't you taking to the streets with violence? I think THAT'S pathetic. You think the end is coming and you just sit and bitch online and do nothing.

-5
skulblakareply
sh.itjust.works

You watched the news even once in the last ten years? What the fuck do you think the BLM and Antifa movements were about, planting daisies?

2
lemmy.world

You are on Earth and the truth is 5 billion light years from you wondering about your existence.

Quote is crazy hard but I disagree with you so much lol

12
lemmy.world

You can't act like the Civil War didn't happen. We put men on the moon. We developed the Atomic bomb. We have 11 aircraft carriers. Whether it fits your argument or not Americans have grit and we will take back our power.

-14
DarkFuturereply
lemmy.world

I find it interesting that nothing you listed is contemporary. Even the aircraft carriers. We've have a lot of aircraft carriers for a long time.

You're reaching pretty far back to find anything of significance Americans have done that's positive. And some of what you listed is decidedly not positive.

Maybe you're thinking about what Americans USED to be.

21

And you are just as easily invalidating things they've done because it fits your narrative.

-3
lemmy.world

There are a lot of points in history I'd bring up to show the grit of Americans before those specific ones. The Civil War was fought to keep the wealth-generating plantations under the federal tax jurisdiction, the moon landing was a cool thing that happened 50 years ago and produced no real tangible benefits at a point of time where those resources could've been put to much better use, the A-bomb was a war crime and our aircraft carriers are used to support illegal wars to kill brown people protect the interests of oil companies.

7
lemmy.world

You are saying that these things are bad things. I'm not saying they aren't. I'm saying Americans achieve things. Americans are fucking tough. Also, I will argue that you couldn't pop a pimple of truth on this statement: "he moon landing was a cool thing that happened 50 years ago and produced no real tangible benefits".

Oh, by golly, are you wrong.

6

These lists are completely disingenuous. Just because something was the first use case doesn't mean it was the only use case for a thing.

For example. Freeze dried food. It's completely impossible to say we would not have freeze dried food without the space program.

-2
GoodEye8reply
lemm.ee

You're doing the country equivalent "I'm not pathetic, look at how big my muscles are". Doesn't matter if you have shitty public education, shitty public transportation, shitty worker rights, shitty health care and a shitty political system that makes change impossible, you can beat the shit out of anyone calling you pathetic.

Such a simplistic view I can absolutely believe you're American.

4
lemmy.world

"I don't like the things republicans do, so all of America are shitty wimps."

-You.

-2

Assuming all of those things are inflicted by republicans, how can they get away with it? You're supposed to have grit and take back power, but somehow you're letting republicans run wild? How doesn't this rub of on all Americans?

3
lemmy.world

No, fucker, WE didn't do any of that. WE are shitposting on Lemmy. I know for a fact you didn't build any aircraft carriers yourself. So can "WE" stop talking credit for things less pathetic Americans have done?

4
lemmy.world

Ugh.....Yeah.....we did. My fucking neighbor welds submarines. I work in manufacturing assisting in building cars, tanks, radar systems, military vehicles. You name it. You might be some tech nerd like most people on Lemmy, but most of us out here in the real world are doing hard shit.

-5
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Pretty bold of you to claim us nerds don't do hard shit. I'm only going to speak to my experience, but I'm only one small slice of the nerd demographic. My background is in network design, security, availability, and global network design. I started out life in a car parts factory, graduated to being on the line crew here, before going inside to work on computers.

How much of your logistics would crumble without us? Exchange of knowledge around the globe? Sales and interfacing with other corporations and customers? Security to keep personal information somewhat protected?

I've contracted with several fortune 100 companies in all sorts of different industries all over the world, from manufacturing to attorneys.

You sound a lot like my family. Only hard labour is virtuous, if you aren't sweating you aren't working. Do you look down on people who do what you consider menial labour? I doubt you'll admit it, but I'm pretty confident you do.

Civilization doesn't work if we think like you. Every single person in my life, from the guys picking up my trash to the surgeon that saved my life are important and necessary to making modern life what it is.

Trying to be divisive between blue and white collar in the working glass is definitely a suspicious fucking take in this climate.

3

So you agree then? America is not a bunch of pathetic people who are going to bend over to fascism?

-3

The atomic bombs and iarcraft carriers are for "Americans (people)"

1
rahreply
feddit.uk

the truth is 5 billion light years from you wondering about your existence

What?

8
lemmy.one

I went through your comment history to see if you are a gun owner, and I think you are not. So this makes you part of the problem you just posed in your comment here, since you have no means to commit to peaceful but aggressive armed protesting.

-33
JoeBigelowreply
lemmy.ca

That's not the right way to encourage people to arm themselves.

22
lemmy.one

I don't have anydesire to encourage people to do anything.

There are people out there who will always be useless bitches that passively complain all day other people aren't doing things when they themselves don't bother to make any effort themselves to try to change shit.

-23
JoeBigelowreply
lemmy.ca

I'm the audience you're talking too. I'm 32 and just got my first rifle. It was awkward for me at first, and attitudes like yours contributed to that.

So fuck you man.

21
lemmy.one

Good stuff. Be sure to regularly train with it, or you might as well wrap a bow on it and give it to the people who will be trying to take it away from you.

-20

He is 100% a jackass but in this particular point he is right. Please learn and practice with your rifle. Untrained gun owners are a huge danger to themselves and others and they usually don't realize it. And owning a gun doesn't do you any good if it gets taken out of your hands in the first 5 seconds of an altercation.

For your safety and others this is actually legitimately good advice.

2

... or maybe they're not reveling every aspect of their lives on a public forum for personal safety reasons.

17
lemmy.world

I am not a gun owner.

I have never fired a gun in my life. I have terrible hand-eye coordination. I know from just playing video games with guns and carnival "shoot the target with BBs" things how bad my aim is.

Also, I'm a coward and I know I could never kill anyone.

I would be of no benefit of you in the glorious revolution with a gun in my hands. You would be more likely to be shot by me accidentally.

3
skulblakareply
sh.itjust.works

This is really important knowledge to know about yourself. I wish more people were this self aware.

But a war requires a lot more than just soldiers. Even if we end up in a hot shooting Civil War 2 there are still many things you and other nonviolent folks could do for your fellows to keep them safe. Safe shelter and food mean even more than guns and bullets in a conflict like that.

I hope with every bit of my heart that we don't have to go there. But if we do, you are not useless. Soldiers may fight a war, but logistics wins one. And in this hypothetical situation a lot of us are going to be very charged up with hot tempers and someone with a cooler head and an aversion to violence will be important to keep things from falling to chaos.

Don't sell yourself short, Squid. A coward with a good head on them is a good person to have on your side in a fight. A coward knows how to prevent that fight that might not have been otherwise necessary.

3

I'm not selling myself short. I said, "I would be of no benefit of you in the glorious revolution with a gun in my hands." I agree, there are other things that need doing.

1
lemmy.world

Both are necessary. The first creates public support. The second "creates government support"

24

The peaceful protest has a purpose. It is the purpose of due diligence. It is to show an escalation. A point at which other avenues were tried and ignored leaving one with no choice but to try others that are more militant. You try all the avenues. And leave the last resort as a last resort. But historically we know that more often than not real change happens when there is either the threat of violence or the actuality of violence.

People as a whole don't seem to be invested until it impacts them. It's hard to impact people enough with peaceful protest to change their minds. That's why blocking highways or major thoroughfares were threatened with violence. Because the point of protest is twofold. It is to educate. But more importantly it is to inconvenience people. Because without the inconvenience, they do not get invested.

13

social policies such as housing, welfare, and medical aid programs protect the capitalist system itself.

It was not always like this but yes over as 40 years the money has been looted and used against the working class.

It took wage slaves all this time but I think it is finally registering:

How is everybody working so hard, we are working more and we are more productive but nobody but few have any more money

The money is being extracted via complex legal, social and propaganda mechanisms and we are letting it happen by being obedient dogs fighting rich man's fake news stories.

4

If you take a look at europe, there is plenty of countries who score way better on these issues, and the underlying system is still capitalism. It might not be perfect but if you include a social aspect and regulate in the interest of the population I believe it is the best system we have.

1

If the political pressure was high enough, political powers would buckle. But see who got voted for president? Its clear that the people chose this themselves sadly

1
where_am_ireply
sh.itjust.works

You live in a country that couldn't elect Bernie as a president. There's no peaceful protest happening. And yet you claim violence is the only option.

In reality, half of your country simply disagrees with you. Start your violence, get a civil war, and maybe you'll finally settle things somewhere somehow.

But don't bullshit about effectiveness of peaceful protest.

Trump won a majority vote in the most recent election. Peacefully, your country chose corpos over moderate middle (there's no left in your politics). Their peaceful protest works flawlessly. You're just not on the winning side of the protest so you call for violence. You will lose this fight too.

0
timestaticreply
feddit.org

I understand why people are upset but its a sad reality, that you just don't have the masses on your side. I think your point is the crux to all of this. If a majority doesn't get behind your conviction then violence will not solve your problem.

1

It's a point that's impossible to get across in this echo chamber. But it's also why this echo chamber will never achieve anything.

Via democracy or violence, for a regime change you first need to figure out a way to get the majority to agree with you.

1
rahreply

and how they actually made change

Uh...

10
baggachipzreply
sh.itjust.works

I mean look at the George Floyd protests and how they actually made change

Did they really, though?

8

Yeah, I agree with their point but I really don't think this is the example to use

4

That looks like something that could have been written on here or reddit a week ago and would have been met with at least modest approval in regards to the oligarchy.

45
STOMPYIreply
lemmy.world

Dude, read the bhagavad gita. It's all about inner peace during violence. A soldier not wanting to fight his kin on a battlefield. When you recognize that sometimes the cost of peace is enslavement you can take extreme action without any attachment to the outcome and remain in peace in your heart. I used to abhorrent violence still do, but I will act without attaching and face rip any monkey that is hoarding and hurting my fellows. MFRA.... monkey face rip association... even Buddha has stories stating no karma is incurred for some situations of violence. You might be stuck in good vs evil dichtomous thinking. There is no good and evil in nature just nature. We make the definitions and than we suffer them. Cast off your definitions and cultured personality and see the real that exist in many many sahdes.

5
chickenreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

You're making a lot of assumptions about where I'm coming from here, so let me clarify a bit why I think it's dumb: the OP essay inherits the flaws of the Unabomber Manifesto it is signal boosting. It's hand waving rhetoric and rationalization, right wing extremist flavored. Its only argument that violence will be useful is to bake in an assumption that of course it will, criticize other, independent options, frame the debate as a moral one about whether saving the world justifies violence, and make that argument with name calling.

I recognize that many people respect this type of argument, but they are wrong, it's bad and stupid.

1
TheFonzreply
lemmy.world

What's the alternative? The health insurers are actively killing people by denying claims. I'm curious.

2
chickenreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

An absence of a clear alternative isn't a substitute for an argument that slaughtering corporate leaders will help the problem. There are practical differences between the circumstance of a wild animal literally fighting for its survival, and a member of a population being abstractly squeezed to death by systemic problems, in that killing is a clear immediate solution in the former but extremely questionable in the latter. Not bothering to acknowledge this makes it a bad argument. Also, all the other reasons I mentioned why it's a bad argument. Kind of reads like edgy highschooler cringe bait too, though that's subjective.

Maybe a better argument could be made, idk. But this one is dumb.

1
TheFonzreply
lemmy.world

I hear what you're saying. My issue with your position is that Thompson is not a mere bystander or segment of the 'machine' that is killing - or in your words "squeezing" - other humans. Thompson, by his own admission, was actively pursuing mechanisms by which denial of care and ultimately death are effected. Why does he get a pass, I'm curious?

1

My criticism is of the writing in the OP, and of Kaczynski's writing, which while contextually relevant, isn't actually about Thompson or even specifically health insurance.

To answer your question though, I don't think he gets a pass, ethically. But I also don't think justice trumps striving for better outcomes in society, and in fact it's the other way around. This isn't exactly being contested; the rhetorical focus is on means and results.

1
lemmy.world

The one time I resorted to violence, it 100% solved my problem. I slapped my bully in class so hard people's ears rang. We ended up becoming friends later on lol.

44

I had a guy trying to bully me a long time ago, i got fed up with him pretty quickly.

I turned around, grabbed him by the throat and pushed him up against the wall after which i punched him.

Never bothered me again, his and my own parents both agreed: "he had it coming".

Now that i'm more mature, i actually feel bad for him because even his own parents didn't try to defend him. Seeing how he behaved, this was definitely part of the cause.

He needed his parents to be there for him, but they just gave up on him from the start.

11

Violence is the supreme authority from which all other authority is derived.

8
lemmy.world

Oh good lord. He kept the gun and the fake ID?

I guess MS in Computer Science doesn't mean you're smart.

38

I worked in higher ed computer support at a major research university for 12 years, believe me I know.

6
sh.itjust.works

I'm guessing he kept it all intentionally. He had the manifesto on him, probably expecting "accidental" suicide by cop in hopes that his message would continue and not be painted over by the media. Yeah, he could have ditched the gun, but again, perhaps he didn't want there to be any shadow of a doubt that he is guilty. This was an intentional sacrifice in hopes of making a change.

23

Yeah, I realized about 30 seconds after I wrote that... "he wanted to keep the gun and the ID as proof that he was the guy".

He escaped clean, and then let himself get caught so he could make his case in court.

Let's see if he plays the next hand: plead 'not guilty', refuse all plea agreements, and demand a jury trial.

20
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

To be fair if you’re never caught that’s probably the smartest thing to do.

Someone discovering a gun is 100% gonna call the police and bam they have a good clue.

8
shalafireply
lemmy.world

I can walk 1/2 a mile in any direction and find a body of water or deep woods where it would never be found. Also, I'd field strip it and chunk the parts in different places.

15
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Do you think he had access to those places without looking suspicious?

He was on the run in a town he has no connection too.

2

There's water in central park. Would've been nothing to chuck the pistol in a pond. Break it down a bit if you're extra. Slide in one stream, barrel in another, mag, grip, etc until you've disposed of it. Or trash cans at various bus stops on the way down to VA. Tbf it's really easy to back seat something like this. His brain must've been running a mile a minute, it's honestly impressive how well he did

6

I guess you didn't gotta be smart to press A a few times when there's a monster in front of you.

3

Where should he have deposed with it not being found? If he had multiple IDs its stupid tho he showed the same one as he knew they were after him

0

This guy gets a free pass on wierd beliefs to me. Sucks that the first ceo assasin was caught though. He really showed how possible it could have been to get away with it though.

36
lemm.ee

Part of him probably wanted to got caught. The guy showed an extreme respect for justice, more than the current US legal system, and he knew what he had done.

28
lemmy.world

history’s first incel

What definition of incel are you using that eliminates the rest of history?

22

He is ID'd the sources of issue more precisely.

Internet liberated the flow info enough for a smart person to connect the dots better.

Uncle Ted was working within the framework of the old world. A lot of shit that is common knowledge to a wage slave now, was reserved to the elites.

Ted's thesis was not wrong but it was very crude.

17
Rekorsereply
sh.itjust.works

His upbringing doesnt diminish his activism. The consequences for him are the same as a poor person as well.

14
braxy29reply
lemmy.world

that remains to be seen. he has access to resources poor people don't.

7
granolabarreply
kbin.melroy.org

Yes he is from a rich background... So plebs should not respect the work he has done

1
braxy29reply
lemmy.world

i said only what i said, intending to imply only that his outcomes are not likely to be the same as someone poor.

2

yeah, that crossed my mind also. i could see it going either way.

1
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I’ve scouered his Goodreads, Instagram, Twitter accounts.

He looks like he’s a tech bro who went to University of Pennsylvania. He had some cool somewhat anti-capitalistic takes, and criticised Elon Musk. But was also following and reposting a couple alt-right accounts like RFK Jr and Joe Rogan. He seems to have been a big consumer of the capitalistic self-improvement type industry.

Here’s his github picture and account

34
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

He was caught with the same new jersey fake ID the suspect used and an anti-healthcare manifesto

11
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Ahhhh.

“it can’t have been him, I was in London with him all of last week”

31
3ntrancedreply
lemmy.world

"He couldn't have been with you in London because he was also with me in Turkey on a Hot Air Balloon ride"

9
lemmy.zip

It seems likely that within short order his unifying action will be drowned out by any divisive perspectives.

Kinda like universal healthcare.

12
psivchazreply
reddthat.com

Sigh. The hope was fun while it lasted. He's too anti-capitalist for the right and too problematic for the left so no side will claim him, and they'll just devolve into claiming it was the other side for a bit before not caring anymore. No revolution to be found here, just more sadness.

5

Makes it better IMHO. He spoke for all of us, we're all getting sick of this corrupt bullshit.

0

If it weren't the information age, the only thing we would know about the guy is what the government wants us to think!

3
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Some problematic interactions with alt right type stuff

(this gives “traditional family values” vibes)

2
borarireply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

I appreciate you posting his takes from every side. Idk wtf to think about this fish one.

Edit - oh just saw the date, he was like 16 when he posted that. I posted stupider weird shit at 36 so I’ll give that weird one a pass.

15

Ohhh I just shared the fish one cuz I thought it was funny and cute and humanising.

My conclusion is he wasn’t a pure ideological leftist like many of us here. But he shared similar critiques of capitalism and grievances.

And on the culture war side of things, he seems to have been more “centrist” ie. taking some points from “both sides”. Which in my opinion is problematic, but also shows we might have more in common with the populist right than we think. A lot of them are deeply critical of heirarchy and inequality similar to us (although they end up supporting billionaires 🤦).

13
nepenthesreply
lemmy.world

Ya, that's really giving off woman-are-baby-receptacles vibes without ever addressing women except as their physiology ("pocket pussies") or sexuality (dancers), which makes it worse. Not to mention it completely misses the point of why people arent procreating.

It seems really weird (and racist) to criticize a culture you aren't ingrained in with such odd specificity.

4

I don't see how #1 and #2 are problematic. #2 might be, but I'd need to see the video.

Unless your argument is that anything remotely positive about Tucker Carlson or Peter Thiel is automatically bad?

3

That just shows how lemmy would be willing to eat alive anyone being able to critically think instead of repeating their pre-recorded mantras on what's good and what's bad.

You're ridiculous, and probably 18.

-3
lemmy.world

While I am too old to advocate for violence, this line hit me pretty hard:

"Violence never solved anything" is a statement uttered by cowards and predators."

28

I'm of the opinion both violent and nonviolent means are probably necessary and there's plenty of nonviolent means of engagement. no war has been fought without support from somewhere, whether that's a national war machine or the supporting element of an insurgency. there's always logistics, resources, and well organization that has to occur.

I'm in no condition to fight myself, but over the coming decades I'm gonna have to be thinking about how much violence I'm comfortable being around and how much we can support people in the thick of it. violence is definitely present already in day to day life, but it's more of an orphan-crushing-machine kind of violence that feels more normal.

10
lemmy.world

This is a silly ad hominem argument though, an indication that what he's arguing against is too valid to refute on its own merits.

Violence solves things. But by the powerless? No, historically speaking that just leads to military action, often followed by mass executions. Fighting fascism with violence is like fighting fire with gasoline. They feed off that shit. Maybe you can argue it worked in Haiti, albeit with a lot of help from yellow fever. But have you been to Haiti?

He's right that peaceful protests never solve anything. But organizing and acting as a bloc solves a lot. General strikes, civil disobedience, boycotts, even voting as a group has a strong track record of changing things.

0
lemmy.world

I want to believe that peaceful organization like civil disobedience leads to change, but I can't recall seeing that work in recent history...

7
lemmy.world

How recent is recent? Tunisia, Egypt (well until the population turned out to be too dumb for democracy anyway) are examples.

It hasn't worked in the US because it's been too half-assed and the existence of democratic options lowers incentives. Contrast the successful civil disobedience during the civil rights era, where the right to participate in elections was one of the things being denied. But with the increasing signs that democracy is being controlled by a few billionaires, it may see a comeback.

-5
rekabisreply
lemmy.ca

and the existence of democratic options lowers incentives.

Those don’t exist anymore. Not in any real capacity, at least. More like utterly useless window dressing and decorative veneer, much like how North Korea is “democratic” simply because they put that word into the country’s name.

Corporations own nearly all the politicians short of ones like Bernie Sanders and OAC. Corporations write the laws and tell the politicians what to vote for. Corporations own and control EVERYTHING, and you have weapons-grade child-like naïvité if you think the working class has any real political power left in America.

5

The unionized working class has plenty of power. Both parties catered to unions during the campaigns. Why? Because every politician is afraid of a bunch of people who could go either way deciding to vote as one. If there were one overarching union representing everyone in the working class, regardless of race, location, or position, the minimum wage would be $100k/year.

1

Fighting fascism with violence is like fighting fire with gasoline.

Remind me again how Hitler’s Germany remained Fascist and in control of all of continental Europe over the last 75 years…

6
lemmy.world

I like the part of Industrial Society where he spend the first 10 pages just bashing on liberals

13
lemmy.world

Those who are most sensitive about "politically incorrect" terminology are not the average black ghetto-dweller, Asian immigrant, abused woman or disabled person, but a minority of activists, many of whom do not even belong to any "oppressed" group but come from privileged strata of society.

Modern leftish philosophers tend to dismiss reason, science, objective reality and to insist that everything is culturally relative. More importantly, the leftist hates science and rationality because they classify certain beliefs as true (i.e., successful, superior) and other beliefs as false (i.e., failed, inferior). The leftist’s feelings of inferiority run so deep that he cannot tolerate any classification of some things as successful or superior and other things as failed or inferior. This also underlies the rejection by many leftists of the concept of mental illness and of the utility of IQ tests. Leftists are antagonistic to genetic explanations of human abilities or behavior because such explanations tend to make some persons appear superior or inferior to others. Leftists prefer to give society the credit or blame for an individual’s ability or lack of it. Thus if a person is “inferior” it is not his fault, but society’s, because he has not been brought up properly.

12
shalafireply
lemmy.world

I've said the same thing as the first paragraph here on lemmy and got buried for it. Always thought that most of the politically correct BS came from white busybodies.

8
lemmy.world

So did MLK. See: Letter From a Birmingham Jail

I must make two honest confessions to you, my Christian and Jewish brothers. First, I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: "I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action"; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man's freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a "more convenient season." Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.

I seriously want to clap every time I read it

5

An inactive majority will always be a bigger obstacle than a counter-radical minority when it comes to change. Any given social movement is usually supported by like 10% of the population fighting heavily from both extremes to shave even a little bit of the ambivalent 80% towards their cause

2
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Maybe I'm thinking of a different manifesto, but didn't ol' teddy start ranting about elves and stuff towards the end of the document?

7
lemmy.world

Tbh it's been a while since I read much past the first few sections.

That said, he was MKULTRA'd real hard. I wouldn't be too surprised if some Terrence McKenna-type weirdness snuck in there.

6
lemmy.world

Yeah you're probably thinking of McKenna. He was real into talking about the elves he met on DMT.

6
sh.itjust.works

I'm wondering if you're confusing Ted K with Terence McKenna? Very dissimilar people but could be a function of reading both around the same time in your life, maybe.

If not and you remember what you're thinking about, and it's indeed a manifesto by a criminal ranting about elves, I'd love a name/title if you feel like sharing.

5

Honestly, I've read a lot of manifestos and writings of people without the firmest grasp on reality and they get kinda jumbled up. It might have been McKenna, it might have been the time cube guy (whose name I forget), it could have been a dmt trip report on erowid.

3
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

No.

I may not agree with everything he says. But it’s quite logical and well argued.

Nothing about elves. More about how technology and capitalism and neo-liberal leftism have ruined the human condition, and the need for revolution.

0

The mistake you're making with ol Teddy is thinking he doesn't know what the difference between a neoliberal and a leftist is.

Bro was nuts and blaming everything on the leeeeeeeffffftttttt in the middle of Reaganism.

4
sh.itjust.works

Took a few courses on American culture where it was notably absent. I think any course of study that starts with Eisenhower's farewell address should end with at least a cursory look at Industrial Society - even if it means those last couple of classes are full of very heated, uncomfortable debate.

It's an important document, regardless of how people feel about the author and what he did.

0
midwest.social

Is your favorite part where he blames liberals, commies, and academics for everything wrong with Reaganism or the part where he decides it's the fault of women and diversity?

4

My favourite part is his position that you can't restore a person's inherent autonomy in a meaningful sense while keeping the larger sociotechnological structures that limit it in place.

Take a look at the direction of the U.S. these days, and the significant rollbacks in the limited autonomy afforded liberals, commies, academics, women, and ethnically diverse individuals either actioned or on the horizon as evidence. There's merit to this position.

I do not agree with all of Ted's positions - I am a collectivist, ultimately and perhaps foolishly, at heart - but I find quips like yours to be distractions. These comments certainly shouldn't be ignored, but considered within the larger context.

That said, if these comments are such that you don't want to engage with the rest of it, that's your decision and I respect it. And I mean that sincerely (trying to account for Poe's law here - I really do mean that).

0

I don't know if I've ever resonated with something so much in my life.

26

Remember when in the french revolution everyone just asked the nobles pretty please?

19
lemmy.world

Wow. This seems highly suspect to me. I seriously doubt Luigi wrote this. It's too perfect. Right? It spells out motive. Desire and intent.

It reads like it's his manifesto.

It also reads like it could have been written after the murder.

This seems fake

15

The second they found him with a 2 page manifesto, the clothes, and the gun days after the shooting; I knew there were going to be Epstein level theories. That is just super convenient, and maybe the cops got really lucky. Or maybe they found the first guy that looked like him and didn't have an alibi.

8

he's just quoting stuff from a take he found online (its all written in the posted image)

2

So you're saying it's fake just because it matches what the guy did? That's some mental gymnastics right there. I don't know if it's real or not, but I'm not just making shit up to support my imaginary conclusion

0
sh.itjust.works

Dang, sounds like Luigi might have had a few oil CEOs in him as well ❤️‍🩹

13

There's a world out there in the multiverse where he still does.

1
lemmy.world

Except the problem is that humans are cognitively advanced than other animals. We should be able to find some way to reason out our differences, otherwise we’re always going to be stuck in a dark cave of our own making. What’s the fucking point of humanity then?

The problem is that there aren’t effective ways to curtail sociopathic behaviors which come to the surface because of our current economic tool of choice. Tbh, it will not matter what economic tool we use because the greed problem and self-preservation problem will remain. It always does!

We should be working towards developing safeguards and mechanisms to protect humanitarian ideals, and to curtail sociopathic behaviors. I think a big part of this is that people should elect better leaders. If you’re forced to choose “lesser of two evils”, then there should be a mechanism to organize an effective write-in choice.

If someone then comes to kill you for making democratic choices, as happens in autocratic regimes, then self-defense is valid and justified.

8

Ok but the CEOs are the sociopaths right? Because it appears to me that Luigi was applying irl solutions to the trolley problem

17
lemmy.world

Sociopathic behaviours are always going to be a huge problem in large societies. They’re not even exclusive to humans anyway. Just look at all the parasites in nature.

All of our cognitive and social abilities break down when you get into large groups. We’re evolved to be able to work with extended family units where we have a reasonable ability to build personal relationships and trust networks among all of the people we interact with.

In large societies everyone becomes anonymous and we’re stuck with societal laws and norms which are constantly under attack. Our usual mechanisms for punishing betrayal through reputation damage and ostracism fall apart in an anonymous society. In more recent history we relied on societal institutions (democratic and judicial as well as private societies) and the media (newspapers, magazines, TV news) to cover some of this role but it was imperfect and only applied to the most infamous offenders.

Now we’ve lost even that limited media function due to the post truth revolution (thanks to the internet) and its acceleration of the breakdown of trust in societal institutions and the decline of the media.

6
niftyreply
lemmy.world

All of our cognitive and social abilities break down when you get into large groups. We’re evolved to be able to work with extended family units where we have a reasonable ability to build personal relationships and trust networks among all of the people we interact with.

Our usual mechanisms for punishing betrayal through reputation damage and ostracism fall apart in an anonymous society. In more recent history we relied on societal institutions (democratic and judicial as well as private societies) and the media (newspapers, magazines, TV news) to cover some of this role but it was imperfect and only applied to the most infamous offenders.

Cool and agreed, but the original point holds up that greed and self-preservation always ruin things for groups of people trying to do anything together. Everything you mentioned is a symptom of corporate interests subverting democracies. Look, there’s nothing inherently wrong with corporations having an interest in their success, but govts. need to be able to curtail their worst tendencies because it makes sense to prioritize long-term benefits over short-term gains.

If people really give a fuck about monied interests and their control over democracies, then they should be pushing for higher taxes on the wealthy (like 250K or more per year) like it’s an existential crises. Because it is. Tbf, 250K is pretty normal in a HCOL, so higher taxes should take that into account.

2

I view governments with the same suspicion that most people around here view corporations. Look at history. The worst atrocities were committed by highly motivated and ideological governments.

When it comes down to it, it’s all just different ways of organizing groups of people and they’re all vulnerable to some of the same problems to do with anonymity, accountability (or lack thereof), and control.

2
niftyreply
lemmy.world

If we think of intelligence as goal-directed and adaptive behavior, then natural selection will select for competitive traits, and so whatever ended up losing was less intelligent in some sense, even if it’s a single-cell organism.

-2
the_fuzzreply
lemm.ee

Actually, there’s a lot of evidence that points to intelligence being a sexually selected trait rather than naturally selected, so in that sense it may actually negatively correlate with survival. In other words, your big brain is the human equivalent of peacock features; it will get you laid but doesn’t do much good when a tiger comes around.

Think of it this way: to sit around doing math problems all day, you have to have the basic necessities for survival dealt with, which shows you’re a good mate within the current environment. Which is all well and good until times change, the going gets tough, and you need to kill something to put food on the table.

0

it will get you laid but doesn’t do much good when a tiger comes around.

This is categorically false, sorry

1
lemmy.ca

I stopped at "what's the fucking point of humanity then?"

.... Are you under the impression that there's a point to living? Some grand plan or purpose that drives people?

The only reason I'm not in the ground already is because when I thought about it, my death would cause suffering to people I cared about, so I'd rather take on that suffering myself than put it on them. If everyone I cared about died, I'd petition for medical euthanasia, if that was denied, I'd go find the nearest bride and swan dive into pavement.

The only reason we exist is to have babies so they can exist and have babies. Human life, indeed all life, lives to procreate, and make more of itself. That's it.

I've always questioned why we're worthy of survival, but all the species we've killed off due to climate change, or hunting them to extinction, or destroying their habitat where they die off because they can't survive in a different habitat, are not worthy of survival.

I'm not convinced that humans should continue to perpetuate themselves long term. Bluntly, I can't point to anything genuinely good that we've done for any creature other than ourselves. We address environmental issues sure, but we caused them. The only thing we go out of our way to do, at all, and with significant disagreement and debate, is fix shit we fucked up. That's it. Everything else has been a selfish pursuit of greed by humans.

What's been happening, has not changed my mind on any of this.

I'm not crazy, and I'm not going to try to exterminate anyone because I don't think humans should continue to exist. I'm still here to bring as much happiness and joy to the people I care about, and I don't have the mental capacity to feel anything but contempt for everyone screwing everything up. I can't spare the effort to hate anyone. It's exhausting.

At this point, I just want everyone to leave me alone so I can live my tiny comfortable life with the people I actually care about, grow old and die.... Hopefully in that order.

2
niftyreply
lemmy.world

Sorry you had to write all that just to get downvoted. But what I meant to convey was that by some cosmic accident a cognitively advanced animal appeared, one that can seek to understand fundamental truths about the universe and its reality.

I just hold that cosmic accident in high regard, and think we have a duty as stewards of things we can understand using skills, talents and properties innate to us as a species. This is part of the reason that I think every human life wasted and not supported to its full potential is a failure of society.

1
lemmy.ca

Oh, I agree with much of what you say. I'm just not convinced that we as a society are valuable in any way that justifies our continued propagation.

Most of what I wrote was to qualify what I'm saying so that it's understood. I expect downvotes because I'm basically calling humans as a species, not worthy of existing. Some people who are very ego driven proud homo erectus, can definitely take offense to my statements; so down votes are generally expected.

I suppose that some downvotes would also come from those that believe that humans were created by God, under that pretense, I would be insulting their God by saying we're not worthy of existing. So yeah.

Between those two, I'm unmoved by the fact that some decided to down vote.

1
niftyreply
lemmy.world

Well ours is the only species which can probe and understand why there is something instead of nothing. There may not be any intrinsic value in anything, but the act of discovery is meaningful.

1

I just want to point out that ours is the only species that we know of that can do those things.

It's pure hubris to think that we're the only ones in billions on billions of stars with potentially more than 10x that many planets in the universe that has sapience sufficient to ask the questions. Statistics says it's extremely unlikely that humans are the only sapient life in the universe.

1

Oh there's still plenty of ways short of violence against people to solve this. This guy 100% echo chambered himself into thinking there was no other way. The spectrum does not jump straight to killing people after peaceful protests are ignored.

0
where_am_ireply
sh.itjust.works

There's a pretty reasonable societal model (that scales beyond 10 people living in a cave) that has so far prevented sociopatic behavior.

We have laws and we have democracy to establish them. Whatever happens in your dumbfukistant, in western Europe it's unimaginable to be able to use violence and physical power to claim territory or food. Even a drunken fight in a bar will get you in a lot of legal trouble. E.g. being a stronger ape gets you exactly nowhere in life if you use want your power to dominate. You could use it to create, and you'd be rewarded.

Very similarly the economic system could be trivially adjusted to conform the societal values and violations would be prosecuted. All this requires is a democratic choice.

The societies so far democratically have no chosen to abolish capitalism. Although a lot of western-european democracies have severely limited the potential for abuse from this system.

We don't need to develop mechanisms, we don't need violent protests, we don't need vigilantes. We simply need for people to choose differently. And if they don't, it's their choice.

Ah, yes, you in your default country definitely need a better democratic system, although Trump did win the popular vote, so I wouldn't hope for that much change tbh.

-4
A7thStonereply
lemmy.world

How well is "western" Europe doing at curbing the global corporations ability to turn the earth into wasteland?

8
where_am_ireply
sh.itjust.works

The majority of people in an average western European country want to drive their car and fly to their vacation destination. They also might heat their homes with gas.

Destruction of climate is not anti-democratic. There are green parties in every parliament and they get 15-30% of votes. E.g. only that many voters consider the issue of climate change to be pressing. The others believe things are fine, or that moderate measures are enough.

You keep preaching "evil corpos oppress us poor". But this is simply not true. The majority of the population is pretty content with the status quo, and if they weren't they could change it any election cycle.

-3
A7thStonereply
lemmy.world

You are making my point for me. They couldn't do anything about the current system of they wanted to within the system. Consent has been manufactured, packaged, shipped, and bought.

2
where_am_ireply
sh.itjust.works

They perfectly can. It requires them to make a collective choices that will require individual sacrifices in order to achieve collective gains (assuming people actually see it that way).

And that's clearly not in anyone's interest. And you're one to tell them what's wrong or right.

There's no system. There are free individuals living their lifes as they see fit. But you somehow keep imagining an evil monster that suppresses everyone's free will, while you, the hero, are unaffected.

-2

If you actually believe there is no systemic oppression, and personal choice can change the world, I have no idea what to say except

1

We have laws and we have democracy to establish them. Whatever happens in your dumbfukistant, in western Europe it’s unimaginable to be able to use violence and physical power to claim territory or food.

Haha, read any historical account of western civilization. The west has always been great about backstabbing its non-west allies, or even each other.

People are people, don’t fall for some us vs. them bullshit, you’re just being a tool for someone else. It’s also pretty funny to me that half the countries some Americans look down on have had more women presidents or prime ministers, lol.

And you can’t seriously say democracy is working as intended when we don’t have campaign finance reforms, and have citizens united in the U.S.? You’re literally living in a world where a billionaire bought a country’s presidential election outcome! What a joke.

6
lemm.ee

Sociopathic behaviour is not prevented, it is rewarded. Stepping on other people to claim more wealth is encouraged. A decent person has no money, in general, and most people are decent. Nobody chose this. Nobody voted for this, and there's no vote which will put an end to it. We are, like it or not, in a situation where we cannot change the system to benefit us (us=the working/middle classes) by peaceful means. The ruling classes are extending their monopoly with every move, and will never willingly give power back. I'm terrified by the prospect, but looking at similar situations in history, I think violence is inevitable.

4
where_am_ireply
sh.itjust.works

What are you on about? You can easily vote for far left in pretty much any of the functioning democracies in Europe. And if a radical left party were to win, they could easily implement a profit cap.

You're talking about some "ruling class" as if we're in a society where such bounds exist by birth right of some sort. Anyone can become a politician and be elected to be the main voice of the country's legislative and executive branches. You don't need violence to radically change everything, you need a majority's approval. And, I'm telling you, your ideas are already out there and they're not selling. They're not selling even peacefully, but you somehow dream that someone will die for them?

-5
lemm.ee

Here's my experience as a citizen of the United Kingdom.
A vote for a party which will benefit the majority of people (which you are calling the "far/radical left") is ignored because of our first past the post political system and because of the mass media, which is rabidly pro-establishment. A lower rate of further education exacerbates this effect. They form an impenetrable system which disallows anything but the tiniest of incremental changes, while the climate and the wealth gap worsen exponentially and relentlessly.

There is a ruling class, and it does largely depend on birthright. None of these billionaires are self made, look closely enough and you will find seed money in their mercurial rise, usually from a family member. You have your eyes shut if you think we're not ruled by the wealthy. It's a fact. If you want to argue this point with me you can, but you will lose.

In my country, it's difficult to become a politician, you usually have to get a specific degree from one of three specific universities, which are much easier to get into if you are -you guessed it- rich.

Which ideas of mine are you talking about exactly? Without some specifics on what you think they are, your last two sentences just don't land.

2
where_am_ireply
sh.itjust.works

A vote for a party which will benefit the majority

We can stop the discussion right here. You clearly know better than the voters themselves what's best for them. In my opinion, it would be the most efficient solution for us to nominate you to be a dictator for life, as you will achieve a better outcome for everyone than them thinking for themselves.

The rest of your argument continues with insults towards the voters disagreeing with your political views "uneducated, influenced by media, etc". You, obviously, do see yourself as a superior being and thinker.

I don't think debating democratic choices with you makes any sense. You're anti-democratic.

-3

You are caricaturing my arguments. It's interesting, because you must understand them to a sufficient level to do this whilst not understanding then to a sufficient level to actually consider them. That's quite a mental effort. Either that or you are for some reason understanding them properly, yet choosing to misrepresent them for some reason.

1

So, since he seems identified, do we know the link they've made between the two different photos by now?

5

If he was then so were a bunch of people. I hear this take 5 times a day on Lemmy, 10 times a day since the CEO tragically stood in front of those bullets.

7
lemm.ee

They're trying to whitewash him into being a conservative nutjob.

-1
Mangoreply
lemmy.world

Why would they want that? What about this makes you think he's a nut job or makes you think others would see it that way?

2
GHiLAreply
sh.itjust.works

Why would they want that?

The rich like making fun of us, and destroying any sense of purpose any retaliation against them has.

What about you his makes you think he's a nut job

Surely none of us think he's a nut job, but the press could make him out to be one for the sake of defaming any sense of message or purpose he believed he had.

"Another criminal was taken into justice today.

His motive? ....lunacy, obviously."

3
Mangoreply
lemmy.world

Sure, but the oligarchs are the conservatives generally. Why would they want to paint someone as one of their own and a nut job?

1

They are two groups. The corporate Democrats didn't go extinct just because Trump won, and they enable fascism through controlled opposition. It's a stance they would easily take.

0

I don't think he's a nut job, but some folks will just see that he cited the Unibomber. There have been less nutty historical figures who held that belief about violence.

1
lemmy.world

Great, now we have confirmed Lemmy is a basically a bunch of un ironical Unabomber stans

-7

Even a broken clock is right twice a day. Peaceful protests do not work. It's why I am okay with calling the George Floyd protests riots, because they worked.

4
feddit.org

In a democracy you need your conviction to reach the masses. But it seems the masses clearly chose the side that is gonna make most people with low income more miserable, that will cut down benefits and any social safety still left and support the cooperations. I kid you not, the masses have chosen this.

Peaceful movements have solved quite a lot actually. Martin Luther King Jr. would have never shown the hypocrisy of the segregation they lived in then if he could possibly be branded as violent and destructive. Which force was fighting for the right cause and held their moral high grounds was undisputed. It was a long and hard fight but they won.

I think the actual coward is the one who shoots another man in the back, who is a cog of the system in the back and pretends he is the one self-righteous who gets to decide justice. We are no animals, and while we need to preserve our future and the kids we also need to preserve civility and the rule of law. If the will of the masses is strong enough the political parties will buckle to the demands. This is a democracy, no dictatorship.

Violence is sometimes needed to counter violence, but this act of violence changes nothing. Violence is needed when a dictatorship suppresses the freedom and dreams of the public and tortures people. Violence is needed when when a different country attacks and tries to invade your country against the will of the people and causes mass destruction and death. Diplomacy takes time but an open approach always needs to be there to resolve violent conflict in the end. Wars usually end in a peace conference. The US is a democracy and the world has plenty of examples where the healthcare system works for everyone and people with low income aren't left out. How does chaos in a democracy solve anything when reform is an option? Go protest, participate as an activist, talk with others about the issue, spread awareness and vote accordingly. Talk to your representative.

My point is in a democracy change is hard but it can come from a grassroots movement, without causing more harm, more death and more suffering.

-9
lemmy.world

I don't disagree with a lot of what the Unabomber wrote. I don't disagree with this person's hatred of the healthcare system.

But you cannot assassinate your way out of capitalism.

It just does not work that way. You cannot assassinate corporations into putting people over profits when they are legally required to do the opposite and you cannot assassinate your way into a law being changed.

-18
melitelereply
feddit.it

The current system was forged with violence. What so you think is gonna beat it? Thoughts and prayers?

29
lemmy.world

Whether or not it can be resolved with violence, it will not be resolved with targeted assassinations by a handful of people.

There is no example where a capitalist system was toppled with targeted assassinations. There are lots of examples where the security state got a whole hell of a lot more oppressive after them though.

I'm sure that totally won't happen this time in the U.S. for sure.

-1
melitelereply
feddit.it

That's such bullshit, security escalation happens either way, they don't need any excuse, just see the track record. Also, it's not like anyone is saying this killing solved capitalism, they just know its impact has shaken the ideological foundation a lot more than finger-wagging at people on the internet

7

I never implied that, but it's definetely something that didn't seem possible in many mines before

1
timestaticreply
feddit.org

The Internet has not changed the ideological foundation in the slightest. It has sparked some calls for reform, but the capitalistic ideology hasn't been changed at all through this murder.

1

I said shaken, change takes longer, but things like this are part of it

0
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

It doesn’t hurt to remind the ruling class once in a while whose boss.

But yeah. A revolution will take a lot more than a targeted assination of a couple CEOs.

11
lemmy.world

Does it help? Because I'm guessing what will happen here is CEOs will just get big security details and less-discerning copycats will end up killing innocent people.

And rates will continue to rise and not one less person will be denied.

5
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

In the short term yes you’re right.

But look at the populist anger this action sparked. These kind of extrajudicial killings that rile up the population, are very much associated with revolutions and changes in power. (Sometimes for good, sometimes for bad).

10
lemmy.world

Dude, America just elected a plutocrat dictator. There's not going to be socialized medicine any time in the near future and insurance companies will pass the cost of their security teams on to the people forced to pay for their needless existences.

7
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

That plutocrat was elected through a manipulation of populist rage.

Check out the policy proposal forums RFK and Trump set up for their supporters. Expanding Medicare has more upvotes than downvotes

Paul Krugmann wrote an interesting piece touching on this yesterday (Gift Article) https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/09/opinion/elites-euro-social-media.html?unlocked_article_code=1.gU4.cSdP.OL0VogKNmVT3&smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

9
lemmy.world

What difference does that make now? Why do you think they actually care what their supporters want?

2

I don’t. But it means that these people may not be so far from the same ideal as us. Which matters in convincing people for a revolution, and elections later on (if they still will be free and fair after Trump).

In fact, polling showed, a substantial number of people in 2016 and 2020 went from Bernie voting in primaries to voting Trump. The people want someone who isn’t scared to criticise neoliberal elitism.

1

Expanding Medicare has more upvotes than downvotes

You really think this represents US society at large? I think you'll need a better source than that.

-1
lemmy.world

No security is foolproof, and a security detail has precious little ability to withstand a raging mob. Importantly, there are only so many former spec ops for hire. Most of these psychopaths will have to settle for 3rd rate rentacops.

3
lemmy.world

Anda security detail has previous little ability to withstand a raging mob.

Which, again, is not targeted assassination.

1
gaaelreply
lemmy.world

I agree with you.
Imo, we need something besides assasinations/sabotages. We have to educate ourselves and others into trusting each other, working with each other, having empathy and understanding solidarity.
But I don't see a way out of capitalism without violence, sadly.

8

Violence? Maybe. Targeted assassinations? No way. This will just make insurance premiums go up because the companies will all hire huge security details and pass those costs on to the people forced to pay for insurance.

7

As much as people are disagreeing, you're right. The systemic pressure is too great to fix it using fear of assassination alone. We need to change the rules if we want to change the game.

7
lemmy.world

Not with any attitude regarding assassinating your way out of capitalism.

It simply will not work.

And if you think healthcare in America is going to get cheaper or fairer because of this, you know nothing about America.

1
lemmy.world

Is there a historical precedent you can point to that proves your statement here?

0
lemmy.world

How about it? Literally nothing to do with ending capitalism. The assasination of Franz Ferdinand was done in the name of Serbian nationalism. How does it apply here? You are grasping at straws, try again.

0
lemmy.world

Gavrilio Princip was an anarchist. Despite what libertarians might have you believe, they are not and never have been fans of capitalism. So no, I'm not.

2
Mangoreply
lemmy.world

I think we can actually. It just does work that way. People a are very discouraged by fear, and these oligarchs are no different.

4
lemmy.world

You know what oligarchs can afford? More security than you can imagine. This one just didn't think to. Do you think any of the other ones will make that mistake? Who do you think will be paying for that security?

2
Mangoreply
lemmy.world

Sounds to me like becoming an oligarch is a downgrade from normal life where you can walk where you like.

1

Maybe, but that does not change what I said. They won't be paying for the security. Premiums will go up. This will not do anything to stop the capitalist healthcare system.

0
lemmy.world

That was a massive popular revolution, not targeted assassination. So why would I tell that to the French?

People also always leave out the fact that it took only 15 years to go from that popular uprising to an emperor being crowned who had just as much power as the king who was executed.

6

In that vein, revolutions have as much of a chance to end poorly as to end well. Look at what is happening in Syria right now. There are a lot of players. The ideal arrangement would be peaceful power sharing inside of a democratic framework, but there is every chance that Assad will be replaced with another violent authoritarian regime.

5
granolabarreply
kbin.melroy.org

Yeah French revolution didn't have any lasting impact on global society

Should just kept the king and worked within the system lll

2
lemmy.world

I didn't say any of those things or even imply them. Why are you putting a bunch of nonsense in my mouth?

2
granolabarreply
kbin.melroy.org

You were down playing its impact and making these implications by omission.

If you disagree with my assessment you are free to clarify your position on the French revolution and its impact on the class relations;)

1

I disagree with you putting words in my mouth. If you don't understand what I meant, ask me. Don't lie.

1
lemmy.world

You can't 'thoughts and prayers' your way out of capitalism either.

And you will find that out when your rates go up because all of the insurance companies will hire massive security teams to protect their executives and pass that on to you.

3
lemmy.world

But you can kill innocent people.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Kaczynski#Bombings

Because I don't know what a computer store owner or a secretary or a graduate student did to deserve having a bomb go off in their hands.

And people here seem increasingly willing to let innocent people get hurt or killed in this new war against CEOs. I find it really, really disturbing.

5

Me too tbh. I really don't wish to abandon lemmy as I left reddit, since I prefer a federated system to it but all these posts are making me think. I just have this ethical principle where murder in most cases is bad and don't like seeing violence being advocated.

1
lemmy.world

Car accident kills innocent people all the time and nobody’s blaming car drivers for it.

What the fuck are you even talking about? What exactly do you think anti-drunk driving laws are about, targeting Chevrolet for their negligence?

4
granolabarreply
kbin.melroy.org

You shill regime propaganda while pretending to on working class

It is uncouth

0
leminal.space

Mental therapy is the way. Our government is an expression of our massed anxiety and disconnectedness. Cure the insanity and society will follow.

1
lemmy.world

The ubiquitous insanity that got Trump elected, and winning him the popular vote as well?

And you think assassinating CEOs will somehow cure that because it is somehow "therapy?"

-3

Then what was your point in relation to what I was saying about targeted assassinations not fixing capitalism?

-2