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105
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • It is way, way, WAY, worse than what it seems. That dog is a symbol of Spanish colonialism. The colonial soldiers used those dogs to rip people apart who resisted.

  • Im saying people generally are deeply mistaken about culture and class formation in the US, and from that ignorance a multitude of mistakes are made, including the idea that the culture war is a distraction made up by the rich.

  • In order to believe that the "culture war" is somehow obfuscating class in a way that tricks workers into superfluous concerns you have to believe that the "culture war" is outside of the class interests of most Americans. IT IS NOT.

    The "culture war" is a manifestation of tensions within the class structure of the US. Colonized peoples are making their voices heard and so the ruling classes along with the metropolitan and white working classes, are responding by arguing amongst themselves, once again, what is to be done with the colonized? Should they be silenced? Assimilated? Enfranchised? These are questions as old as settler-colonialism and are natural to class structures with global stratifications.

    The cultural questions are emergent from structure and superstructure of capitalist and colonial relations. They were not invented by the fucking boogyman at Chase Manhattan who then forces the helpless poor to be racist or woke. Routinely the voices of the colonized are co-opted by working people on either side of the "culture war" for their own ends, to protect their class status. The subsequent contradictions then fuel the development of colonial political discourse.

    The "culture war" and its vulgarity absolutely doesn't just protect the rich, it protects white people and metropolitan workers from having to reckon with their own class character for the benifit of their class, which is stratified fundamentally differently from that of colonized nations within their own apparent borders, or the "4th world," or from the rest of the world beyond their borders.

    Not everything is about the dastardly rich people tricking the stupid workers into working against their own interests. What reductive thinking! Working people in the core are fine to argue with their uncle at thanksgiving, and ultimately advance colonial discourse, to assert an identity that can distract from the fact that THEY HAVE MORE TO LOSE THAN THEIR CHAINS.

    By participating in the "culture war" they can ultimately engage in class struggle AGAINST the global proletariat, AGAINST the 4th world, and uphold the stratification that they enjoy. The "culture war," therefore, is not a distraction, it is the redirection and co-optation of colonized class antagonisms by the American colonial project for its own purposes, including for its lesser classes.

  • I wish it was obvious for more people.

  • The best one is the one he didn't direct

  • It's not really dying IMO

  • I agree but it is still curious. Usually, there is a need for "peace" from an imperial perspective because the chaos makes asserting imperial sovereignty messy. So the ceasefire talk is something I would expect a sheepdog role player to agree with as long as he can avoid condemning the occupation or the "right" for the occupiers to persist with their crimes. But he doesn't even do that, he won't even go along with the ceasefire minority. I'm not sure what he really gains from this other than not having to hide his true power as an imperialist anymore. The US regime has been a little extra aggressive on this war, probably because it is closer to American settler-colonial "home" than Ukraine, and Bernie is something of an example of this.

  • Exactly. Any threat to Israel is a threat to US legitimacy.

  • Spatial awareness and sensitivity, especially in doorways, hallways, and sidewalks.

  • there will always be a want and need if there are people willing or wanting to engage in the work to provide those things then why should it matter to anyone

    Well shit, if there is a market for it, how can it be bad?

  • It's an easy game to play actually. Strict contructionists will only recognize discourse that can be understood in 1790, or whichever relevant time. They use dictionaries from that time and the writings of the amerikan founders to make their points. You won't easily find anything from that era that implies "religion" is anything other than Christianity and it's various sects. To assert otherwise would be to legislate without congress. So they can argue that excluding non-Christians and non-Protestants is in line with the intentions of the authors regardless of article 6.

    Is it a perfect line of thinking without contradictions? Of course not, but neither is the counter idea that America was designed to accommodate non-Christians.

  • Par for the course for a lot of starfield content. OP doesn't have a point to make even if it wasn't such a corrupt attempt to say something. It's just more contrived outrage.

  • It doesn't even make any sense period. States are the ones that delineate "rights." A sovereign state would never need to affirm its "rights" or have them affirmed, unless their sovereignty was conditional.

    So, all of this is a show the international (imperial) community plays to endorse the genocide. The US gives the occupier of Palestine the "right" to defend itself from blowback and demands support from its other vassals and victims to solidify the sovereignty of an illegitimate project through their recognition as legitimate players. Yet this seemingly challenges the sovereignty of the project, almost as if it is just a US colony in need of permission....

    The US would never - maybe not even rhetorically - rely on rights granted to it by the international community to assert its imperial sovereignty. The society of states is such a fucking joke.